The Thunderbird, Spring 1982

THunDERBIRD
AMERICAN GRADUATE SCHOOL OF INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT
SPRING 1982
1 InterAd
A Different Twist to Teaching Advertising.
4 Alumni Award
John Warner takes Jonas Mayer Award.
5 Special Report
Barter Growmg in World Trade.
6 Campus News
Promotions, department news, spring enrollment and more.
8 Silver Reunion for Class of '56
Alums honored on return to campus.
9 ,Donde Estan?
Missing alums from '54.
10 Que Pasa?
Alumni gatherings across the country and throughout
the world.
12 Contacts
Resources Person! Alumni Association roster.
14 Focus on Latin America
ITT Key Issue Lecture Series addresses Economic Development.
16 Update
Classnotes on T-Birds around the world.
25 Graduation - December '81
Caps and gowns dress up the ceremonies and begin a
new tradition.
From the Editor
During the course of a year hun­dreds
of letters from alumni come
across my desk so that I may pluck
out the sad news of personal
tragedy or death and the happy
news of transfers, promotions or
new babies. It's one of the nicest
parts of my job.
One day last December a letter
from a recent graduate, addressed
to the alumni director, took that
routine journey to my desk, but re­mained
longer than usual. I read
it-and reread it-several times. I
think it says something special. I
reprint it here for you.
Sonia V. Thurmond
Editor
As a recent graduate of AGSIM,
and as the new director of Latin
America at LeRoifDresser, I was
especially touched by the tragic
death of one of our most distin­guished
alumni, Clifford Bevens.
I received the Thunderbird which
told of this untimely tragedy just
days before receiving the assign­ment
to make a sales visit to Guate­mala.
I had actually pushed hard to
convince management that a trip to
Guatemala was justified. Being
well-versed on Latin American
affairs, I realized that a trip to this
country brought with it special con­siderations
due to political and so­cial
upheaval. But being new to the
company I felt the need to prove
my worth and leave my training
days behind me. I write to you to
somehow capture on paper my
conceived obligations for making
THunDERBIRD
Spring 82 Volume 81, Number 3
Quarterly magazine of the Alumni
Office of the American Graduate School
of International Management, Glendale,
AZ 85306
Assistant Vice-President
Institutional Development
and Publisher:
Thomas R. Bria
Editor:
Sonia V. Thurmond
Special Correspondent:
AI Ilch
Staff:
Cathy Benoit, Naomi Cooper, Kraig N.
Johnson, Diane, Kelly, Donna Cleland
and Renee Drabier
Design:
Pat Kenny, Gray Day Graphics, Phoenix
Front Cover:
Student agency team from WB-557
reviews slides considered for moodset
portion of their presentation.
this trip. I became moved at the
thought of reviving what had been
abruptly silenced; and to demon­strate
that T-Birds could go on and
conduct international business
under any circumstances.
Carrying these thoughts with me,
I walked through the streets of
Guatemala City, conducting busi­ness
as usual-the way I know that
Clifford Bevens would like to see it
done ....
Having returned from a success­ful
trip, I felt that something had to
be rekindled, or recovered, and I
will carry with me the determina­tion
that could only be gained by
going forth, as any T-Bird would,
to succeed as Clifford Bevens had
throughout his career.
J.D. Allen
Class of '81
Photo lnJ Jon Whitaker
AGSIM's INTERAD:
Source of Talent for Advertising
According to the yellowin~ pii~es
of a 1958 catalog, tucked away in
the school archives, AD-200
(Advertising Theory & Practice)
was offered for the first time as an
elective in the department of
foreign trade at what was then
considered a struggling upstart of
an educational institution, The
American Institute for Foreign
Trade. Twenty-four years later,
by Sonia V. Thurmond
WB-557 ("INTERAD," Advanced
International Marketing and
Advertising Workshop) is still an
elective at American Graduate
School of International Manage­ment,
now an internationally­known
graduate school.
INTERAD, like AGSIM, has
evolved through the years into a
more sophisticated entity, but still
retains some of the "unusual."
Since 1976 the INTERAD program
has been under the direction of
Professor Paul Schlesinger, who
joined the school after retiring as
chairman of the board of Tatham­Laird
& Kudner Advertising in
Chicago.
Interviewed recently as to the
workings of INTERAD '82,
Schlesinger talked easily about
advertising and marketing courses
at AGSIM. He communicates his
devotion to his craft, not with
theatrics or the hard sell, but rather
with a sincere and calm approach.
His pride in the students, their
achievements and INTERAD is
evident.
Since taking over INTERAD,
Schlesinger has made some
changes in the structure of the
program as well as the logistics of
the actual presentations. He says
there are more applicants for the
class than the 28 openings available
each fall and spring semester.
Students are chosen through
interviews (which Schlesinger
conducts himself) and selection is
based on the applicant's academic
record, suitability for the course,
interest and desire. The selected
students split into four teams or
"agencies," choosing their own
positions within the team: account
executive, and heads of the areas of
The spring 77 winners-Kentucky Fried Chicken in Italy-posed with their "chicken"
after their win. Shown, left to right, back row: Gail Ray Houser, now in sales with IBM;
James F. Haag, Jr ., with N. W. Ayer & Son; David Kreckman, with Ashland Chemical
Co. Front row: Mark Scott, with Grey Advertising in Spain; Sarah Blodgett, with Exxon;
and Nimrod Kovacs, with Wells, Rich Greene, Inc.
2
market research, creativity, media,
merchandising and sales
promotion.
The team "agency" then obtains
a project from a multinational
company to develop a complete
marketing and advertising plan for
the introduction of a product into a
new foreign market. The companies
solicited by the students provide
the information, material and
financial assistance for the entire
project.
Schlesinger points out that this
corporate support is an important
change in the INTERAD program.
Previously, the team members had
relied on their individual personal
resources to finance the team
presentations. The cost was
becoming prohibitive and the lack
of equal funds made fair competi­tion
among the teams difficult.
The students begin work on all
aspects of the project and meet
regularly with Schlesinger and the
plans board, comprised of four or
five students who have done well
in previous INTERAD classes.
Throughout the semester the teams
build their plans and presentations
to be delivered before the panel of
top advertising and marketing
executives who serve as judges on
INTERAD DAY, near the end of
the semester.
The competition is fierce, accord­ing
to Schlesinger, and a glance at
the judges' evaluation sheets
dispels any idea that INTERAD is
merely a show. In addition to the
students' performances being
evaluated individually, all aspects
of the presentation are rated from
excellent to weak. Ratings on good
business sense, investment
advisability for the company and
overall objectives and strategies are
considered. Schlesinger points out
that in this type of competitive
situation, each team is essentially
an "ad agency account group" and
the panel of judges is the "client
company." When the client asks a
question, the account group had
better have the right answer. "It's a
real world experience and like the
real world, there is only one win­ner
- no second place," explained
Schlesinger. That winning team is
presented the Phoenix News­papers,
Inc. Award at graduation
exercises.
When asked if the structure of
THE THUNDERBIRD SPRING 1982
the INTERAD program at AGSIM
was unique to the educational
world, Schlesinger responded that
he knew of no other upper level
course structured exactly in the
same manner. Many schools use
the project approach to advertising
but the presentations and judging
panel composed of marketing and
advertiSing executives as done at
AGSIM are missing in those
programs.
Schlesinger feels that the judges'
INTERAD
HISTORY
The history of INTERAD (or
advertising presentations as they
were called prior to 1976) goes back
to 1958 when the AD-200 course
was taught by Richard Turner. Two
hours of credit were given for the
elective course and while presenta­tions
were performed, they were
given during a regular class
meeting.
Most of the credit for the present
day format of INTERAD goes to
Edwin Coleman, former executive
THE THUNDERBIRD SPRING 1982
participation is one of the most
important aspects of the program.
Top executives are invited to
campus twice each year (at their
own expense) to view the presenta­tions,
serve as judges and interview
students for employment. (This
aspect of the presentations was
conceived and organized by Ed
Coleman, who taught advertising
from 1962 to 1966. See box item on
page 3). Schlesinger explained that
agreement to recruit students is a
vice president of Upjohn Interna­tional.
Familiar with the School
from recruiting trips to campus,
Coleman offered his services to the
School soon after his retirement
from Upjohn. He began teaching
here in 1962. He conceived the idea
of inviting marketing and
advertising executives to the
campus to serve as judges for the
presentations, so they could view
the exemplary work done by the
students. The plan was a huge
success, bringing executives from
throughout the country to campus
twice each year - and - students
were getting jobs from the expo­sure.
Coleman's untimely death in
1966 cut short a productive career
and left the advertising classes
without an instructor.
Fresh from the advertising
business in New York, where he
had been a partner and owner of
Ehrlich, Neuwirth & Sobo adver­tising,
Norton Sobo took over the
advertising classes in the fall of
1966. Described by Schlesinger as
the "stem-winder" in the chronol­ogy
of advertising at AGSIM, Sobo
was inspired by a need to "return
something" to the advertising
profession that he held so dear. He
directed the program with a
passion, expanding on Coleman's
concept, until his sudden death in
the summer of 1972.
After Sobo's death, a part-time
instructor handled the program for
a semester until it was taken over
by Dan Kaufherr. Imprinting his
own style on the presentations,
they continued to grow and expand
under Kaufherr's direction until his
retirement from teaching in 1976.
At about the same time Paul
Schlesinger, chairman of the board
of Tatham-Laird & Kudner
prerequisite to receiving an
invitation to attend INTERAD and
serve as a judge.
Some of the firms that have been
represented on the judges panels
over the years include J. Walter
Thompson, Young and Rubicam,
Foote Cone and Belding, Ogilvy
and Mather, Doyle Dane &
Bernbach, Needham Harper and
Steers, McCann Erickson, Dentsu,
Publicidad Sibony, Leo Burnett,
Please turn to page 9
Advertising in Chicago, heard from
a friend in the American
Association of Advertising Agencies
about the teaching position at
AGSIM. This was at a time in his
life when he was not 100 percent
happy with what he was doing and
having made the decision "to
change his life," he visited the
campus to look over the territory.
Not impressed with the campus
itself, he nevertheless stayed a
couple of days and found he really
liked the students. He determined
he wanted the job, conducted his
own campaign to secure it and he's
been hard at it ever since.
Schlesinger began his advertising
career in 1947 as a sales-service
manager for Columbia Broadcasting
Company and later went with
Tatham-Laird & Kudner as a
media-research and account
supervisor. He moved in 1962 to
Needham Harper and Steers and
became senior account director and
senior vice president. In 1966 he
returned to Tatham-Laird & Kudner
until he joined AGSIM. Like his
predecessors, Schlesinger doesn't
rely solely on textbook material, but
shares with the students his wealth
of experience from his many years
in the advertising world. In addi­tion
to his teaching responsibilities,
which he finds far less hectic than
the advertising business,
Schlesinger performs consulting
work for companies and advertising
agencies in Chicago, New York and
Phoenix.
3
John Warner, left, receives the
Jonas Mayer Alumni Award from
Dr. Voris during the December '81
commencement exercises.
month-but we did develop our
language and business experiences.
I returned and joined Pepsi Interna­tional,
and here I am still with the
same company-32 years later-af­ter
living in seven different parts of
the world and residing abroad 27
years, travelling in 60 countries.
Alumni Award Goes to John Warner
Thirdly, I selected Mexico where
I have worked 20 of these years, at
first with Pepsi and then with the
Frito-Lay Products called Sabritas.
We started the latter in 1967 with
37 bicycles selling 600 thousand
dollars per year. We now have 4,000
trucks, 7,700 employees, a compre­hensive
farming program that
cooperates with Mexico's govern­ment
global food system, and we
sell every day almost double my
first year's sales. Mexico has been
good to me, and my family has en­joyed
the excitement of living in a
country as steeped in history and
folklore.
Jo~ A. Warner (,48), president,
Sabntas, a Pepsico organization in
Mexico, was presented the 1981
Jonas Mayer Alumni Award at the
December '81 graduation cere­monies.
The award is bestowed annually
on an alumnus who, in addition to
his personal achievement, has re­flecte~
distinction on his profession
and his country's position in
world business by his outstanding
performance in international ser­vice.
In accepting the award, John
noted the feeling of honor he was
experiencing by sharing the follow­ing
remarks with the graduates.
':In my fe~ minutes today, I would
like to outlIne for this outstanding
graduating class what this award
means to me:
First, that I made the right deci­sion
in leaving my paradise in cen­tral
Michigan and my civil en­gineering
position for a future in
international marketing and man­agement.
I had a three-year career
interruption in the infantry in
World vyar II and had developed a
world View of opportunities. I ar­rived
here and enrolled in Septem­ber
1948. It took me four years of
inter~ational endeavor to equal my
prevlOus annual earnings in
Michigan.
Secondly, I truly believed that
my career should be international-
4
not a headquarter based traveler.
So when I talked to Mr. Shurz, the
man who truly inspired this institu­tion,
and me-he said go abroad
young man. Don't hang round for
some miracle offer-get experience,
perfect your Spanish, and enjoy the
excitement of this great hemis­phere.
Then two of us took a freight
to South America-myself and Mr.
Jack Siebert (also from the class of
'48).
Several months later, we
obtained employment in Monte­video,
Uruguay for $60 per
Lastly, this institution attracts
very special students-not the doc­torllawyer
type who stays in his vil­lage
or city (with aligned support
from family and friends) or takes
over his father's business. We are
usually adventurers who are
searching for an exciting environ­ment
to exploit our strengths.
Usually we are innovative entrep­reneur
types with well-developed
egos to accomplish what we set out
to do. I hope all of you have the
satisfaction of a career like mine,
and of a moment like this, and reap
the true values of this institution."
W,arner proudly displays the Jonas Mayer plaque that accompanies the Alumni Award, as
friends look on.
THE THUNDERBIRD SPRING 1982
Barter Growing In World Trade
by Al Ilch
AMA Staff
Editor's note: American Graduate
School of International Management is
affiliated with the American Manage­ment
Associations. Al Ilch, of the
AMA Public Relations Office, is a reg­ular
contributor to "Thunderbird."
Barter, the oldest form of com­merce-
that many of us would
assume exists in only the most
primitive of cultures-is currently
undergoing a resurgence. Manyex­perts
predict that it will constitute
at least 20 percent of all internation­al
trade in the 1980's.
The rise in barter-like agree­ments,
commonly referred to as
countertrades, is not just limited to
exchanges between developing na­tions.
Many U.S. companies, such
as General Motors and PepsiCo,
have become involved. The size
and complexity of these deals have
grown to such an extent that a
number of firms have established
countertrade subsidiaries to handle
the transactions.
The concept of countertrade
appeared earlier in the 20th century
when some European nations re­sorted
to it in order to build up
their economies following World
War I. The New York Times reported
last October that economists attri­bute
countertrade's return to prom­inence
" . . . to rising oil prices,
which have lifted the debt of
nonoil-producing third world coun­tries
to $400 billion and thrown bal­ance
of payments far out of
whack."
There are many countertrade
variations currently being used.
One is a straight swap and doesn't
involve the exchange of currency.
Usually just two parties are in­volved
and each must have some­thing
the other wants. A second
form is switch trading, which in­cludes
a third party or switch trad-
THE THUNDERBIRD SPRING 1982
er and is based upon the use of
credits, which can't be directly con­verted
into cash but do represent
purchasing power of products
manufactured in the country of one
of the participating parties. The
credits are then sold at a discount
to a switch trader who, in turn,
must find someone who can pur­chase
something with the credits.
A third form of countertrade is
known as counterpurchase or
"offset" agreements. This occurs
when one company, in order to
complete a sale, agrees to buy
"non-resultant" products (goods
not related to its normal business)
from the second party in order to
offset the cost of the transaction to
the second party.
One of the more popular types of
countertrade is the compensation or
"buy-back" deal. A typical buy­back
arrangement might involve a
Western firm building a plant in a
foreign country and then being
compensated with goods produced
at the plant.
Countertrade offers several
advantages for emerging and lesser
Barter-Countertrade
developed nations. It can reduce
trade imbalances and the outflow of
currency, while it generates the
currency needed for industrial de­velopment.
On the other hand,
U.S. companies, traditionally pre­ferring
to deal on a cash basis,
often cite disadvantages. The quality
of the products offered by emerg­ing
and less developed countries is
sometimes inferior, and the burden
of long term obligations, some
lasting ten years or more, are not
uncommon. American business
people also find that they often
must deal with red tape, especially
in Communist countries. U.S.
firms, however, are finding that
countertrade is becoming a necessi­ty
if they wish to continue to com­pete
in the world trade market. As
former Secretary of Agricul ture
Robert Bergland told The New York
Times last October, fl •• • when a
company decides it wants to en­gage
in countertrade, it opens its
doors to the three-quarters of the
world's population that cannot
afford to deal in hard currency."
May 17-18, 1982 AMA Headquarters, New York City
Meeting #10331F-IO
Price:
INDIVIDUAL
FEES
REGISTRATION CARD
AMAMEMBERS
$545
NON-MEMBERS
$615
REGISTRAR AMAllntemationaJ, 135 West 50th St., New York, N.Y. 10020
Tel: (212) 246-0800
YES, I want to attend ___________ date __________ _
Ust team registrants on separate sheet o Thisconfinns phone registration. Full fee is payable in advance. 0 I am entitled to AMA Member
fee 0 Please send membership information 0 Bill me
Name: ___________________________ ___
Admess: ___________________________ __
Mark Reynolds, assistant vice president, A.I.C., New York, center, who lectured at the
International Insurance and Risk Management Winterim conference, talks with a student
while program director, Duane Hall, right, looks on.
A student shakes hands with Dr. Robert C. Kramer, agribusiness program director at the
W.K. Kellogg Foundation, who delivered the banquet address at the conclusion of the
Agribusiness Winterim Conference. (Photos by Kraig N. Johnson)
6
Winterim
Enrollment for Winterim was 441
with 166 of that number being en­tering
students. In addition to the
introduction of an international
business ethics program, four "con­ferences"
were offered: Agribusi­ness,
directed by Dr. Robert Foster;
International Banking, under direc­tion
of Dr. Taeho Kim; Internation­al
Insurance and Risk Management,
directed by Professor Duane Hall,
and Comparative Industrial Rela­tions,
Dr. Jack Barbock, visiting
professor from the University of
Wisconsin, directing.
International Business
Ethics Added to Win­terim
A course on international busi­ness
ethics, directed by Dr. Robert
Moran of the International Studies
Department was included in the
Winterim course offerings. The
program was developed by Dr.
Marshall Geer, vice president for
academic affairs and Dr. Moran.
Grant support for the program
came from the Levi Strauss Foun­dation
and Chevron U.S.A.
Readings, case studies and
simulation games were used in the
course, which was designed to
make students aware of corporate
policies of selected U.S. multina­tional
corporations vis-a-vis the
Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
Ethical dilemmas faced by interna­tional
business people in selected
countries were also reviewed as
well as government regulations and
implications on the ethical business
issues of working and conducting
business in other countries.
Water and Gas Lines
In - Electrical Lines
Being Installed
Wasco, Inc., Phoenix, Arizona,
was awarded the contract to install
the underground primary electrical
system on campus and trenching
began in mid-January and should
be completed in three to four
months. The new lines will replace
the major electrical trunk system on
campus and reduce electrical
meters from eight to one.
THE THUNDERBIRD SPRING 1982
Charles Mannel Tom Bria
Promotions
President Voris recently an­nounced
three promotions in the
administration.
Charles Mannel, former director
of Career Services, was named vice
president for corporate relations.
Mannel jOined AGSIM in 1976 after
13 years with the University of
Minnesota, where he had served
on the business faculty, as assistant
dean, programs and administration
and director of student, staff and
alumni services.
Dr. Thomas Bria, former director
of alumni relations, was promoted
to assistant vice president for insti­tutional
development. He will be
responsible for the offices of alumni
relations, communications and de­velopment
services. Bria joined the
School in 1980 after serving as
assistant alumni director at Arizona
State University for three years.
Ms. Carol Hazelett was promoted
to director of Career Services. She
has been associated with the School
since 1969, and was named assis­tant
director of career services in
1976. She was head of domestic
travel services of the Arizona Auto­mobile
Association, before coming
to AGSIM.
Spring Enrollment
The total enrollment for the
spring semester stands at 1083 with
433 first semester students; 245
second semester, 300 third semester
and 105 fourth semester. Prelimi­nary
figures indicate approximately
25 percent foreign students and
nearly 34 percent women students.
THE THUNDERBIRD SPRING 1982
Carol Hazelett
Academic Departments
Modem Language
Dr. Mary Ann Critz attended the
AATSP Conference in Seattle in
early fall to present her paper at
the "Lusu-Brazilian Literature ses­sion.
Professors Christa Britt, Helmut
Roessler and Lilith Shutte, of the
German section, attended the fall
WAGS Conference also in Seattle.
Dr. Robert M. Ramsey, chairman,
Modern Languages Department,
served as a visiting professor at the
Beijing Institute for Foreign Trade
in December 81IJanuary 82. He also
visited IIST in Japan to survey their
English as a second language
program.
World Business
Dr. Clifton Cox, named acting
chairman of the World Business
Department when Professor Bossert
resigned, has been appointed
permanent chairman for a term
ending September '83.
Professor Frank Tuzzolino, in
conjunction with T.G. Griffith, pre-pared
an article, "International
Banking in the 1980' s: A Global and
Regional Perspective," which
appeared in the August/September
issue of Arizona Business.
During his recent visit to London
School of Economics to deliver a
paper, Dr. Taeho Kim discussed
issues in theory of international
banking with Professor James E.
Meade, a Nobel laureate, of Cam­bridge
University who is renowned
in international economics.
International Studies
Dr. Beverly Springer contributed
a chapter to a recently published
anthology, European Women on the
Left, Slaughter & Kern, editors. Dr.
Springer's chapter covered the acti­vities
of Anna Kuliscioff, a noted
Italian feminist, who participated in
the emergence of European social­ism
and feminism in the late 19th
and early 20th centuries.
Organizational Changes
The campus computer center has
been placed under the supervision
of Business Affairs and the mana­ger
of the center will report to Lee
Stickland, vice president for busi­ness
affairs, according to a directive
from President Voris. He also
appointed a computer advisory
committee comprised of Drs. Bria
(assistant vice president for institu­tional
development), Conklin (pres­ident
of the Faculty Senate), Geer
(vice president for academic affairs)
and Ramsey (chairman of Modern
Language Department). The Presi­dent
of ASLC (student government
organization) and one additional
student also serve on the commit­tee,
which will recommend policy
to the computer center manager
and the vice president for business
affairs. more news on page 24
Registration lines were long and frustrations were many as 1083 students arranged for
spring classes. Kraig N. Johnson
7
After 25 years-12 members of the Class of '56 gather for a group photograph. Left to
right, back row: Webb Todd, Michael Newton, Wayne Parkinson, Daniel Boller, John
Stewart, Richard Land, Charles St. Clair, Robert Cottam, Fernando Pulido. Front row:
Senorita de Noronha, Irving Perlman, Marion Phelan Land, Jo Siegle.
'56 Alums Return to Celebrate
Silver Anniversary Reunion
There was talk of old times,
friendships reestablished, memories
shared and visits with former profs.
"Yes, the old campus has changed
some" - "Larry Finney is still the
same, but the towel is bigger" -
"the Senorita - ever charming" -
"and Martha S 1yder remembers
EVERBODY'S name."
The informal reception in the
Goldwater Lounge on Thursday
evening prior to Friday's gradua­tion
provided the alums and faculty
and staff an opportunity to get
together and remember times past.
It also gave the Silver Reunion hon­orees
a chance to catch up on news
of the growth and development of
AGSIM.
On Friday the group met in the
alumni office, visited the placement
office, the library and academic
affairs office, and were treated to a
8
campus tour before attending the
pre-commencement luncheon with
the board of trustees at President
Voris' residence.
Several last minute cancellations
cut attendance to a dozen, with
honors for the longest trip going to
Irving Perlman who came from
Accord, Massachusetts.
At the graduation ceremonies the
alums were presented their Silver
Graduation Certificates.
This is the second year the alum­ni
office has organized the Silver
Reunion for the class celebrating
the 25th year after graduation, and
it appears to be on its way to be­coming
a tradition for AGSIM. The
class of '57 will be honored this De­cember.
All you '57 Thunderbirds
out there - be sure and make a
note on your calendars now. Grad­uation
is scheduled for Friday, De­cember
17 and we hope you'll all
plan now to attend. The alumni
office will be sending the first
notices some time in the early fall.
Watch for them. Let's make the '57
Silver Reunion the biggest yet.
The photographer caught Jo Siegle obviously
enjoying a story from someone in the
group.
It's been a long time-;-Michael Newton,
left, and Richard Land, right, meet at the
Silver Reunion reception.
THE THUNDERBIRD SPRlNG 1982
INTERAO/Continued from page 3
and Grey Advertising to name a
few. The list is lengthy and
includes numerous other ad-alley
names. T-Birds are employed
throughout these agencies. Benton
and Bowles has been represented
on the judging panel for more than
10 years, and also claims the
highest number of T -Birds in their
employ. Another agency that has
close ties with AGSIM is Young &
Rubicam Inc. "Mr. Advertising"
himself, Ray Rubicam, was a
member of the School's board of
trustees until his death in 1978.
Y & R also provides a full tuition
and stipend scholarship for an
AGSIM student each year.
Many consumer product com­panies
also participate in INTERAD
judging, such as Vicks Chemical
Company, Colgate Palmolive and
the Clorox Company.
Schering-Plough International
supported the '81 program with a
generous donation.
The winning INTERAD team of
spring '78, presented their entire
campaign before the full member­ship
of the American Association of
Advertising Agencies at its
national meeting, held in Scottsdale
at the Camelback Inn. This
exposure for AGSIM and its
students was arranged by
Schlesinger, who served as national
director at large and chairman of
the government relations committee
of the Four A's.
Interest in the INTERAD
program has grown to the point
that tickets for admittance must be
obtained well in advance of each
semester's presentation. Standing­room-
only crowds plus the local
fire marshall's insistance on open
aisles prompted the use of this type
of attendance control.
Schlesinger sees the future of
advertising in computers and
electronics and as for the future of
INTERAD, he predicts the pre­sentations
will continue to be one
of the important interesting events
on campus. They will continue to.
improve in scope and sophistication
and make contributions to
consumer marketing and the
advertiSing profession. And as long
as Paul Schlesinger has anything to
do with INTERAD, you can bet on
those predictions!
THE THUNDERBIRD SPRING 1982
Class of '54
We need your help! If you know the where­abouts
of these alumni, please fill out the form
below and mail to: The Alumni Office, Amer­ican
Graduate School of International Manage­ment,
Glendale, Arizona 85306.
By providing our office with this information,
you assist us in keeping track of the successes
of our graduates. A list of unknown alumni will
appear consecutively by graduation year in up­coming
issues of "Thunderbird." We're eager to
receive news about you, your family or your T­Bird
friends for our Update section, so please
include that information also.
Muchas Gracias!
Almquist, Frank A.
Banning, William D.
Barrett, Roy A.
Belding, George A.
Bibelheimer, Reuben, R.
Biggs, Donald W.
Blanchard, Frank E.
Blood, Eugene H.
Bondurant, Herbert L.
Brice, Roland D.
Butterworth, William Y.
Chalson, Paul
Christy, Donald
Clark, Robert E.
Clarke, Philip F.
Clarke, Richard R.
Crane, Ted R.
Davidson, Roger M.
Devine, John A.
Dykstra, Andrew H.
Ellis, Roger
Engstrom, Gene B.
Erchick, William A.
Espinoza, Athur
Fennimore, John R.
Fischer, Merton H.
Fisk, Albert W.
Gianakouros, Kimon
Gillett, Thomas P.
Goretasas, James G.
Goss, Geoffrey H.
Greedy, Warren K.
Hallock, Joe L.
Hedenberg, Charles R.
Hendricks, Herbert W.
Hewitt, Frank L.
Higgins, Hubert L.
Jabin, Ernest R.
Kerr, Norman S.
Kiernan, John M.
Kouras, Kim
Kubicek, Joseph L.
Law, Gerald D.
Lindfors, Ralph V.
MacDonald, Robert H.
Maier, Norman
Mangino, Paul A.
Marienthal, Louis B.
Miller, Dabney D
Modiano, Joseph
Moore, Robert D.
Moss, Eugene
Nash, Frederick H.
Nicholl, John M.
Nover, Alvin F.
O'Neal, Ronald L.
Petrequin, Harry J.
Pfeifer, Edmund T.
Pierce, Albert K.
Proulx, Dounne B.
Rayman, William E.
Rogers, John A.
Schag, John P.
Schuman, Barton L.
Soltz, Sally Ann
Stamper, Richard R.
Strouse, Herman L.
Urias, Brigido V.
Valladares, Carl E.
Vath, Robert F.
Walden, Walter C.
Whistler, Donn
Wiltbank, Leo G.
Zambianco, Julian P.
Name and Mailing address _______________ _
Business affiliation ____________________ _
Title ______________________ _
Business phone ________ Home phone _______ _
9
Washington, D. C. . . . Brian Marshall
reports that the November gathering had
about 35 people from AGSIM and several
other schools in attendance for the
reception and the presentation by Mr.
William Edgar, director, Bureau of
Economic & Business Affairs, U.S. State
Department. He presented an excellent (if
somewhat pessimistic) assessment of
prospects for international trade in the
coming years, according to Brian.
Thunderbird Club of New England
The November meeting at Foreign
Affairs pulled 21 alums, who then ad­journed
to Tatsukichi-Boston for din­ner,
organized by Danielle Dufour and
Suzanne Remar. Eric Bjerke gave an in­formative
overview of political and eco­nomic
trends in Japan. Special awards
were presented to Steve Hall and John
Wicker for their longstanding financial
backing of the chapter.
Alumni director Tom Bria and vice
president for external affairs, Robert
Hom attended the December Harvard
Club meeting.
At the February meeting Karen McCor­mick,
with the First National Bank of
Boston, gave a presentation on banking
in the Middle East.
Club president Jay Donovan advises
that the TCNE has come a long way in
the past two years, giving credit to an
"extremely active core of eight to ten
people" who are great to work with
and who wish to continue their contact
with the school and its alumni. More
specifically, during the past few
months, the Club has worked with 10
to 15 prospective students and has pro­vided
a network of T-Birds for recent
graduates and alumni transfers from
other parts of the country and world.
Future events calls for a dinner at
Michael's Waterfront on April 6 with a
presentation by Sandy Jenkins of First
National Bank of Boston.
Dallas-Fort Worth ... The November
15th outing at UniverSity Park (near
S.M.U.) produced 20-25 enthusiastic T­Birds
who kept plugged into the Cow­boy-
Lions game.
10
Singapore ... The 5th Annual Singapore Christmas Party was held at Mary Cuf­fe
('68) and Bo Walker's ('68) house on December 16. There were 64 in attend­ance-
making the biggest party yet.
The Singapore group has moved their monthly meetings to The Pavilion Res­taurant
and Dolphin Bar, 275 Orchard Road, telephone 737-4155. Meetings are
still held the last Wednesday of every month at 5:30 p.m. All visiting T-Birds wel­come!
Florida ... Enjoying a get together at
Marco Island this past summer were
left to right Elen and Tom Granger
('65), Earl Oman ('67) and Bob and
Loretta Capwell ('70). Missing from
photo were Bill Dunnuck ('65) and Dale
Fidel ('61). Anyone interested in join­ing
us next summer, please contact:
Earl K. Oman, 750 San Esteban, Carol
Gables, Florida 33146.
Stephen Hall ('69) of Dedham, Ma.,
left, congratulates Babson College Pres­ident
William R. Dill at his inaugura­tion,
October 2, 1981. Stephen repre­sented
Dr. Voris and AGSIM at the
ceremony.
THE THUNDERBIRD SPRING 1982
T-Bird Double Wedding in Germany ... Pictured left to right for a dual wed­ding
ceremony in Munich this past November are: newlyweds Axel Mees ('76,
with BMW) and the former Georgia Barron ('77, consultant with McKinsey &
Company); guest Peter Jucht (,76, with American Hospital Supply Corporation in
Paris) and newlyweds Sonia Victoria and Victor Alfaro (,76, Economics Counselor
at the Mexican Embassy in Brussels).
Tulsa ... Seated: Udo Sietins and Bill Brown. Left to right, standing: Jeff Daw­son,
Ralph Glascione, Jim Burton, Jr., John Martens, Lee Johnson, Rose Ann
Sietins, Jim Crawford, Brian Gawer and Steve Wallace.
THE THUNDERBIRD SPRING 1982
Saudi Arabia ... Ghassan Majdalani
('75) does find time during his travels
in Saudi Arabia and Egypt to relax and
enjoy time with friends at their Oasis
retreat outside Riyadh.
Greece ... Randy Ramler, Gary Fallou
('79), Eric Parssinen and Tim Watkins
(both '78) get together in Greece. They
all work for Service and Supply Inter­nationai,
owned by Howard Crooks
('49).
Chicago ... Area T-Birds have
organized a regular monthly meeting at
Cafe Bohemia, 138 S. Clinton (corner of
Clinton and Adams) in Chicago. The
group will meet the first Friday of every
month, beginning at 5:30 p.m. All
Chicago area T-Birds and those alums
visiting the area are invited. Ample
free parking is located next door.
Bahrain ... There was a T-Bird Christ­mas
party at the home of David Carpi­ta
and they've found 13 T-Birds on the
island. The group continues to meet
each two-three months.
Tulsa, Oklahoma ... Tulsa T-Birds be­gan
a series of meetings in the early
fall as a result of the combined efforts
of Brian Gauler ('69) and Udo Sietins
('70). According to Brian, Oklahoma
has over 60 T-Bird alums listed, split
between Tulsa in the eastern part and
Oklahoma City in the west. Of approx­imately
30 alums in the Tulsa area,
more than half have become active in
getting together on a fairly regular
basis.
San Francisco ... The San Francisco
Bay Area Thunderbird Alumni Associa­tion
elected officers at their Christmas
gathering in December. They are: presi­dent,
John Austin; vice president, Tom
Williams; treasurer, Anne Hayden and
secretary, Katie Bonar. Serving on the
board of directors are: Hal Coggins,
Dick Fredrickson, Bruce Eberly and
Claire Larson. Regional contacts are:
San Francisco-North Bay, Hal Cog­gins;
East Bay, Claire Larson and South
Bay, John Lambert.
Berger Erickson, executive vice
president, attended the Bay Area
Christmas party on December 5 at
Bardelli's Restaurant.
The Bay Area T-Birds meet every
first Tuesday of the month at 5:30 p.m.
in Embarcadero Center No.1 at Bar­naby'S.
11
If you are visiting, job-hunting or moving to
their area, the T-Birds marked RP (resource
person) will help you. If you'd like informa­tion
about alumni meetings and activities in
their area, the T-Birds marked AA (alumni
association) will advise you of times and
places of get-togethers.
ARIZONA
Morris A Barkan (RP. AA)
PO. Box 40693
Tucson, AZ 85717
(602) 325-0468 (0)
Noble Blackshear (AA)
1892 W Sage
Tucson, AZ 85704
(602) 297-7678 (H)
(602) 252-7231 (0 )
Edward J Dombroski (RP)
8105 Via de Villa
Scottsdale, AZ 85258
(602) 991 -6769 (H)
Rolla B Holland (RP, AA)
PO. Box 1307
Phoenix, AZ 85001
(602) 266-6758 (0)
CALIFORNIA
Daniel W Bohart (RP)
14244 Gaelyn Ct
Poway, CA 92064
(714) 748-9486 (0)
Unda Carlson Haun (RP)
137 Arcadia Ct
Pacifica, CA 94044
David 0 Chapman (RP)
1740 Plaza Del Norte
Balboa, CA 92661
(714) 675-4905 (H)
(213) 518-2350 (0)
Paul R Collins (RP, AA)
160 Lower Via Casitas
Greenbrae, CA 94904
(415) 461 -6883 (H)
(415) 981 -8316 (0)
James R Corley (RP)
8373 Rosewood Ave. #202
Los Angeles, CA 90048
(213) 655-6204 (H)
(213) 856-6099 (0)
James M Dale (RP, AA)
clo Villa Nova
3131 W PaCific Coast Hwy
Newport Beach, CA 92660
(714) 641 -1838 (H)
(714) 642-7880 (0)
Mary F Doan (RP)
1207 Lorain Rd
San Manno, CA 91180
(213) 273-7860 (0 )
Bruce J Eberly (AA)
448 StudiO Circle #3
San Mateo, CA 94401
(415) 344-9417 (H)
Paul E Elias (RP)
3866 Sacramento
San Francisco, CA 94118
(415) 751-4216 (H)
(415) 546-7001 (0)
Yu Fukui (RP)
2501 Redondo Beach #234
Gardena, CA 90249
Roland E Garcia (RP, AA)
24 S. Thorne Avenue
Fresno, CA 93706
(209) 442-8100 (H)
John Michael Haun (RP)
137 Arcadia CI.
Pacifica, CA 94044
(415) 994-0470 (H)
(415) 362-7440 (0)
Alain JP Labat (RP)
1730 Halford Ave. # 144
Santa Clara, CA 95051
(408) 985-7039 (H)
John B Lambert (RP)
804 Nash Rd
Los Altos, CA 94022
(415) 941 -4667 (H)
(408) 925-6238 (0)
Gary G Miller (RP)
390 Islay Street
San Luis Obispo, CA 93401
(805) 544-4484 (H)
George C Mussenden (RP, AA)
2325 Longden Ave
San Marino, CA 91108
(213) 289-8304 (H)
(213) 289-6895 (0)
AntOniO T Savarese (RP)
9676 Carroll Cyn Rd #B2
San Diego, CA 92126
(714) 487-4140 (0)
Ronald A Thomson (RP)
8105 Buena Fortuna
Carpinteria, CA 93013
(805) 684-4624 (H)
(805) 644-7461 (0)
Gary L. Towell (RP)
17512 Ermanlta
Torrance, CA 90504
Louise C. Ure (RP)
120 Green St
San Francisco, CA 94111
William T Walsh (RP)
3548 D,v,sadero
San Francisco, CA 94123
(415) 874-1963 (0)
COLORADO
S. Robert August (RP)
12266 E. Bates Circle
Aurora, CO 80014
(303) 751 -0428 (H)
(303) 469-3377 (0)
John 0 Cullinan (AA)
2030 E. 11th #401
Denver, CO 80206
(303) 377-1810 (H)
(303) 530-2300 (0)
Linton 0 Kingsbury (RP)
2557 E Woodmen Rd
Colorado Springs. CO 80918
(303) 598-5434 (H)
(405) 528-2378 (0)
Timothy C Walker (RP)
P.O Box 54
Colorado City, CO 81019
(303) 676-4191 (H)
(303) 676-3353 (0)
CONNECTICUT
George A Wehmann (RP, AA)
28 Plymouth Rd
Stamford, CT 06906
(203) 324-0428 (H)
(203) 323-7896 (0)
Henricus M A. Winnubst (RP)
33 Swanson Drive
Milford, CT 06460
(203) 874-4300 (H)
(203) 358-5435 (0)
DISTRICT OF
COLUMBIA
K.A. "Casey" Cummings
ENI Companies
1000 Wilson Blvd , Suite 2402
Arlington, VA 22209
(703) 528-8780 (0)
(703) 998-0865 (H)
FLORIDA
Mark W Faller (RP)
433 Worthington Dr F2
Winter Park, FL 32789
(305) 629-1444 (H)
Randy F. Graves (RP)
11610W 39th SI. #2
Coral SPrings, FL 33065
(305) 753-6540 (H)
(305) 771 -0764 (0)
George E. Grimmett (RP)
2660 W State Rd 434-Sulte #5
Longwood, FL 32750
(305) 862-3518 (H)
(305) 830-5135 (0)
James B. Rudd (RP)
14114 Arbor Hills Road
Tampa, FL 33624
(813) 962-3207 (H)
(813) 223-7777 (0)
Sally Rudd (RP)
14114 Arbor Hills Road
Tampa, FL 33624
(813) 962-3207 (H)
(813) 223-7777 (0)
AntoniO R Vidal (AA)
10521 SW 99th St
Miami, FL 33176
(305) 667-7140 (0)
C. Greg Wadas (RP, AA)
1110 Uncoln Ct
Cape Coral, FL 33904
(813) 542-3818 (H)
GEORGIA
R. Edward Foy (RP)
clo Carpets Inti Georgia Inc
P.O Box 1503
Orchard Hill Rd
La Grange, GA 30241
Martha E Goodyear (RP)
322 E Harris St
Savannah, GA 31401
Annalee Hixson (RP)
1055 Piedmont Rd #B-1
Atlanta, GA 30309
(404) 874-0128 (H)
Arthur M. Lucas (RP, AA)
2572 Hyde Manor Dr., N W
Atlanta, GA 30327
Rodney A Taylor (RP, AA)
655 Ramsdale Dr
Roswell, GA 30305
(404) 992-3216 (H)
(404) 393-9900 (0)
HAWAII
Harold Fanning (RP)
44-208 Malae Place
Kaneohe, HI 96744
(808) 254-1221 (H)
(808) 235-4591 (0)
Tom E.lJune B. Pearson Sweetser (RP)
894 Kaahue Street # 10
Honolulu, HI 96825
(808) 396-8486 (H)
ILLINOIS
Michael Edward Biller (RP)
30 E. Huron #3004
Chicago, IL 60611
(312) 944-5494 (H)
(312) 346-5900 (0)
Eric Alexander Denniston (RP)
5914 Meadow Dr
Lisle. IL 60532
(312) 969-2992 (H)
(312) 656-8600 (0)
Robert E Johnson (RP)
PO Box 813
Arlington Heights, IL 60006
(312) 358-6464 (H)
Judy S Purze (RP)
88 W Schiller #809
Chicago, IL 60610
(312) 266-1084 (H)
(312) 875-0256 (0)
Anita Marie Sur Claricoates (RP)
707 Circle Drive
Roselle, IL 60172
(312) 732-4000 (0)
Jesse G. Wilson (RP)
4432 N. Richmond
Chicago, IL 60625
(312) 463-7835 (H)
INDIANA
J. Wright Witcher (RP)
9144 Bryant Ln. #IA
Indianapolis, IN 46250
(317) 842-9147 (H)
(317) 261-6271 (0)
KANSAS
George L. Hiller (RP)
7712 Tomahawk Rd.
Prairie Village, KS 66208
(913) 648-6099 (H)
(816) 234-2603 (0)
KENTUCKY
Edgar T Busch (RP)
Western Kentucky UniverSity
Management Department
Bowling Green, KY 42101
(502) 842-9138 (H)
(502) 745-5408 (0)
LOUISIANA
Robert W Hesson (RP)
219-21 Olivier St
New Orleans, LA 70114
MASSACHUSETTS
C. Michael BenniS (RP)
111 Suffolk Rd
Chestnut Hill, MA 02167
(617) 232-9116 (H)
Jay J. Donovan (RP)
12 Jones Ave
Wilmington, MA 01887
(617) 658-6594 (H)
MARYLAND
Randolph W Boyer (RP. AA)
1221 PrOVidence Rd.
Towson, MD 21204
(301) 321 -7985 (H)
(301) 244-4267 (0)
MICHIGAN
Stephen C. Engel (RP, AA)
6361 Eagle Ridge Dr
Kalamazoo, MI 49004
(616) 385-8976 (H)
(616) 385-6746 (0)
DaVid C. Votruba (RP)
2792 Windsor
Troy, MI 48098
(313) 689-2302 (H)
(313) 225-3518 (0)
MINNESOTA
Mary K. McMunn (AA)
1671 Juliet Ave.
SI. Paul, MN 55105
(612) 699-1164 (H)
(612) 726-2047 (0)
MISSOURI
Robert R. Nelson (RP)
7 Gateswood Dr
SI. Peters, MO 63376
(314) 278-2820 (H)
(314) 652-7600 (0)
NEBRASKA
H. Mike Harvey (RP)
3222 Center SI.
Omaha, NE 88105
(402) 342-2620 (H)
(402) 342-4083 (0)
William S Morns (RP, AA)
4825 So. 91 st Ave
Omaha, NE 88127
(402) 339-4920 (H)
(402) 341 -0500 (0)
NEW JERSEY
Belmont Haydel (RP, AA)
423 Larenceville Rd #802
Laurenceville, NJ 08848
(609) 698-5000 (0)
William O. Neumann (RP)
60 Ramsey Rd
Middlesex, NJ 08846
(201) 722-0330 (H)
(201) 722-0330 (0)
Sherman J. Olson (RP)
37 Dodle Dr
Parsippany, NJ 07054
(201) 267-1598 (H)
(212) 964-4990 (0)
NEW YORK
Robert M. Ballinger (RP)
1 Parnil Drive RFD #2
Gansevoort, NY 12831
(518) 587-7723 (H)
(518) 783-2380 (0)
Gregory BuchaJ (RP)
27 Cobbe Circle, N.E
Jamestown, NY 14701
(716) 664-3180 (H)
(716) 664-6513 (0)
Thomas P. Carlin (RP)
314 E. 80th SI. #IB
New York, NY 10028
(212) 775-3134 (0)
John C. Cook (RP)
clo Merrill Lynch
One Liberty Plaza
165 Broadway, 49th Floor
New York, NY 10006
(212) 637-8661 (0)
Michael D. Crotty (RP)
201 E. 87th St., Box 106
New York, NY 10028
Kathleen M. Kidder (RP)
84-15 63rd Ave
Middle Village, NY 11379
(212) 476-0203 (H)
(212) 520-7495 (0)
Peter J. Martin (RP)
111 HicksSI. #15A
Brooklyn, NY 11201
(212) 922-2248 (H)
Frances E. McCutchon (RP)
220 E. 79th #3A
New York, NY 10021
(212) 879-7362 (H)
(212) 758-9700 (0)
LUIS I. MeJia-Maya (RP)
clo Fordham Unlv
P.O. Station 37
Box 439
Bronx, NY 10458
(212) 365-8151 (H)
(212) 933-2233 (0)
Paula Messer (RP)
34 Black Mallard Circle
Fairport, NY 14450
(716) 425-2308 (H)
J Richard Saint-Amant (AA)
144-49 Charter Rd. # 110
Jamaica, NY 11435
(212) 380-3565 (H)
(212) 269-7230 (0)
R. Wayne Walvoord (RP)
2550 Baird Rd
Penfield, NY 14526
(716) 223-7492 (H)
(716) 385-1151 (0)
OHIO
Roy A. Daugherty (RP)
clo General Electric Co.
Aircraft Engine Group
Mail Drop C-15
Cincinnati, OH 45215
(513) 243-5443 (0)
Thomas G Hackim (RP, AA)
2356 Torrey Hill #3
Toledo, OH 43606
(419) 474-3414 (H)
(419) 247-0176 (0)
OREGON
James P. Pillon (RP)
18462 Sw. Castle Ct.
Beaverton. OR 97007
(503) 649-4920 (H)
(208) 643-8139 (0)
Gay M. Schellentrager (RP)
7115 N Delaware
Portland, OR 97217
(503) 285-8517 (H)
PENNSYLVANIA
Ahmed M Hussein (RP)
103 Concord PI
Harleysville, PA 19438
(215) 362-8307 (H)
(215) 822-4300 (0)
Bruce;Marsha Crumley (RP)
207 Woods Rd
GlenSide. PA 19038
(215) 886-7638 (H)
(215) 299-6629 (0)
Donald W Stanek (RP)
2862 Washington St
PalmerTWP
Easton, PA 18042
(215) 252-7394 (H)
THE THUNDERBIRD SPRING 1982
Robert J. Schneck Randolph K. Miller (RP) Joseph T. Miller (RP) ECUADOR ITALY
c/o INA Corporalion 4100 Greenbrier Dr. #312 Box 25029 Glenn E. Mallory (RP) Evangelos C. Hassiotis (RP)
25 Tower Houston, TX 77098 Awali, Bahrain c/o Artlel Cia Ltda c/o Citibank NA
1600 Arch Street (713) 523-6914 H) 754960 (H) V M Rendon 120 Y Panama Foro Buonaparte 16
Philadelphia, PA 19101 (713) 236-4216 (0) 755483 (0) 3 PibO 20121 Milan, Italy
David B. Terrar David B. Trott (RP, AA) Arlette E. Ramsey Miller (RP) Guayaquil, Ecuador 028542226 (0)
c/o Westinghouse Nuclear Inl'l. 6811 Mimosa Ln. P.O. Box 25029 04387552 (H) Niels J. Lindeskov (RP)
5 Parkway Center Dallas, TX 75230 Awali, Bahrain 04304355 (0) Via Della Scala 42
Pittsburgh, PA 15220 (214) 691-5857 (H) 754960 (H) EGYPT 50123 Firenze, Italy
PUERTO RICO
(214) 386-2388 (0) 754451 (0)
George T. DeBakey (RP) (055) 284000 (H)
William B. Beaty (RP)
John D. Willyard (RP, AA) BERMUDA c/o Rockwell International Gianni Torti (RP)
8131 Wycomb Dr. c/o Blue Bell IntI. Robert J. Rosser (RP) 15 Radwan EI Tabib, 11th Floor Via Amedeo D'Aosta 8 Houston, TX 77070 Giza, Cairo, Egypt 95 Wall Street Guanijibo Industrial Zone Seldon Rose
Mayaguez, PR 00708
(713) 890-2163 (H) Pitts Boy Rd. 989358 (0) Milano, Italy
(713) 227-0987 (0) Pembroke, Bermuda 022716304 (H)
Ole B. Dam (RP) UTAH (809) 295-3050 (H) ENGLAND 026293307 (0)
c/o Digital Equipment Corp. (809) 295-2482 (0) Robert C. Hackett (RP)
P.O. Box 106 Thomas G. Goudie (RP) c/o SKF IVORY COAST
San German, PR 00753 5154 Ridgecrest Dr. BRAZIL Mundells Kenneth Erickson
(809) 833-5019 (H) Salt Lake City, UT 84118 Mark S. Abrams (RP, AA) Welwyn Garden City African Development Bank
(809) 892-1946 (0) (801) 967-9036 (H) c/o First National Bank of Boston Hertfordshire, England Room 802
Jerome Firsty (RP)
(801) 486-7241 (0) Rua Libera Bardo 487 25111 (0) B.P. 1387
P.O. Box 14423 VIRGINIA Sao Paulo, Brazil Ashok D. Patel (RP) Abidjan, Ivory Coast Santurce, PR 00916 32-07-11 ext. 518 (0) K.A. "Casey" Cummings (RP) 2599629 (H) c/o Continental Can Inti.
(809) 726-3491 (0) 3608 Oruid Ln. 378101265 (0) Coburg House Sheet Street JAPAN
Robert/Gloria Shuman (AA) Annandale, VA 22003 Roberto Bumagny (RP, AA) Windsor Terence M. Esmay (RP)
c/o Robert A. Shuman & Assoc. (703) 573-0961 (H) Caixa Postal 30618 Berkshire, England Meitsu-Daily
Box 1393 (703) 528-8780 (0) 01144 Sao Paulo, Brazil Roby S. Swan (RP) 1-1 Nishi-Shimbashi
Hato Rey, PR 00919 WASHINGTON Anthony B. Da Silva (RP) #9 Midholm Nimato-Ku
Nicole Stevens (RP) c/o FMC Divisao De Guine ESC Wembley Pk Tokyo 105, Japan
c/o Leo Burnett Co.
Charles S. Hazen (RP, AA) AvPaulista 1274 Middlesex HA9 9LJ, England John K, Pidcock (RP)
Park Blvd. Condominium #901
17810 184th, N.E. 9 Andar 904-7801 (H) c/o Ava IntI. Suite 502 Woodinville, WA 98072
San Juan, PR 00911 (206) 788-3295 (H) 01310 Sao Paulo Brazil FRANCE Higashi Azabu Sky Heights
John F. Tomlinson (RP, AA)
2832722 (0)
Alfred C. Hamburg (RP) 3-5-1 Higashi Azabu, Minato-Ku
c/o Caribbean Properties Ltd. WISCONSIN Stanford P. Wilson (RP, AA) 67 Avenue Gambetta Tokyo, Japan
171 Del Parque Thomas J. Metcalf (RP) Av. Graca Arvantta 57 Courbevoie 92400, France B. Michael Powell (AA)
San Juan, PR 00911 1046 Williamson Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Peter J. Jucht (RP) c/o American Home Assurance Co.
(809) 725-9544 (H) Madison, WI 53703 274-0166 (H)
11 Bis Avenue Poniatowski Kioicho Tbr Bldg. 10
(809) 725-7365 (0) Richard A. Storch (RP) BRUNEI Maison-Lafitte 78600, France 5-7 Kojimachi
RHODE ISLAND 7419 Whitacre Rd.
Bruno J. Cornelio (RP) 39625915 (H)
Chiyoda-Ku, Tokyo 102, Japan
Madison, WI 53717 9522370 (H)
Donald A. Dinuccio (RP) (608) 833-2552 (H) c/o Bank of America 30328512 (0) (03) 234-2171 (0)
35 Latham Farm Rd. (608) 836-1011 (0) Suri Building Jerome J. Petin (RP) Takaaki Tanaka (RP) Smithfield, RI 02917 Jalan Tutong c/o Revlon
(401) 232-1264 (H) Todd N. Thurwachter (RP) Bandar Seri Begawan, Brunei 21 Rue Bossiere 3-16-10-408 Shiroganedai
(401) 781-6500 (0) c/o S.C. Johnson Mail Station #37 Paris 75116, France Minato-Ku
1525 Howe st. CANADA Tokyo 108, Japan
SOUTH CAROLINA Racine, WI 53408 Gilles J. Rancourt (RP) GUATEMALA JORDAN Virginia A. Thompson (RP) WEST VIRGINIA c/o Champion Road Machinery Ltd. Juan F. Forster (RP) Mohammad Anwar Abdelrahman (RP) 900 Gracern Rd, #227 POBox 340 c/o Izabahn Exports
Columbia, SC 29210 Edwin N. Vinson (RP) Goderich P.O. Box 770 c/o Jordan Kuwait Bank
(803) 765-4342 (0) P.O Box 53 Ontario NYA 4C8, Canada Guatemala City, Guatemala Head Office
Huntington, WV 25706 (519) 524-7870 (H) PO. Box 9776
TENNESSEE (304) 525-2166 (H) (519) 524-2601 (0) GREECE Amman, Jordan
William M, Ferry (RP) (304) 522-2742 (0)
Mark C. Rousseau (RP) Denis Gavanas (RP) KENYA 5932 Sedberry Rd, A-706 702 3rd Ave SW c/o Sanavag Associates Group Gertrude S. Muloli Kopiyo (RP) Nashville, TN 37205 P.O. Box 1622
(615) 352-4019 (H)
Calgary
Syntagma Square c/o TWlga Chemicals
Alberta, Canada P.O. Box 30172 (615) 383-0801 (0) (403) 265-3588 (H) Athens 126, Greece Nairobi, Kenya
John D. Walker (RP) ARGENTINA Jack D. Taylor HONG KONG 559777 (0)
5010 Ashley Dr. Robert B. Garrison (RP) 2045 Lakeshore Blvd West Bill Tak-Ming Ling (RP, AA) Mustafa MamuJee (RP, AA) Nashville, TN 37211 Las Heras 1056 Martinez Suite 3904 c/o CCAA Inn Ltd. c/o MamuJee Bros Ltd. (615) 834-4619 (H) Buenos Aires 1640, Argentina Toronto, Ontano M8V 2Z6, Canada 10th Floor P,O. Box 90600 (615) 741-5870 (0) 7927545 (H) Ka Wah Bank Building Mombasa, Kenya
TEXAS 7433611 (0) CHILE 259-265 Des Voeux Road C
Carlos P. Seidel (RP) Max Krauss-Droguett (RP) Hong Kong KOREA D. Bruce Blankenship (RP)
Box 5246 San Martin 140-Piso 18 c/o Triumph IntI. 5242320 (H) Jung-Bae Kim (RP)
Lubbock, TX 79417 Buenos Aires 1400, Argenlina Avda Santa Maria 1926 5453047 (0) 190-76 Sadang-Dong
(806) 793-0742 (H) 343862 (H) Santiago, Chile Dongjak-Ku
(806) 762-5221 (0) 344276 (0) 744544 (0) INDIA Seoul, Korea
Yadlam G. Dwarkanath (RP, AA) 590-6442 (H)
Houston W. Briggs (RP) AUSTRALIA COLOMBIA Sri Krishna Spg & Wvg Mills 28-7607 (0)
3519 Bremen Steven 0 Clarke (RP) Gabriel E. Cuellar (RP) Subramanyapura Jae Sk Lee (RP, AA) Dallas, TX 75206 c/o Inti. Harvester Co c/o Graco Inc Bangalore-560061 , I nd ia
211 Sturt St. Apartado Aereo 90877 41517 (H) c/o Korea Development Bank
David L. Brothers (RP)
S. Melbourne Bogota 8, Colombia 41595 (0) I.P.O. Box 4570
1105 Wayne Drive
Victoria 3205, Australia 236-9855 (H) Seoul, Korea
Round Rock, TX 78664 Behram R. Sethna (RP) 7769745 (H)
(512) 255-1608 (H) 8591640 (H) Greg W Grinnell (RP) Karai Estate 77165 (0)
r
Debora Sue Burks (RP)
6977532 (0) c/o Security Pacific Natl. Bank 2nd Floor
AUSTRIA Apartado Aero 92434 248 T aredo Rd. MEXICO 4530 Briar Hollow PI. #203 Bogota 1, Colombia Bombay 400-007, India Craig J. Dudley (AA) Houston, TX 77027 Thomas J. Brennan (RP) Rio Rhin #77 Penthouse (713) '629-5490 (H) c/o AM Soybean Assoc. COSTA RICA Shankar Sundaram (RP) Mexico 5 DF, Mexico (713) 960-5182 (0) Gatterburggasse 18/213 James Dahlstrom (RP, AA) Mahalakshmi #25 Kasturi
Elizabeth B. Buzard Burdette (RP) A-1190 Vienna, Austria c/o Super Servicio Ranga 1 Yengar Rd. Claude Shaneyfelt (RP)
28 E. Whitewillow Circle 317219 (H) Apartado 992 Madras 600018, India Explanada # 1220-A
The Woodlands, TX 77381 374118 (0) San Jose, Costa Rica 71062 (H) Lomas de Chapultepec
812408 (0) Mexico City 10 OF, Mexico
Michael M. Byram (RP) Paul A. Tveit (RP) William F. Goode (RP, AA)
333 Melrose Dr. #34C c/o AM Embassy Apartado 1266 INDONESIA MOROCCO
Richardson, TX 75080 16 Boltzmanngasse San Jose, Costa Rica Daniel J. Goldsmith (RP) Judith K Taybi Cole (RP)
(214) 934-0880 (0) Vienna, Austria 352947 (0) c/o Scott & Danmark Ltd. 52 Rue Patrice Lumumba
James Roy Easter (RP)
426127 (H)
James C. Stanley (RP, AA) P.O. Box 410/KBY Appt 13
5310 Lost Forest Dr. # 182
315511 (0)
Apartado 5181 Jakarta Selatan, Indonesia Rabat, Morocco
Houston, TX 77092 BAHAMAS San Jose, Costa Rica 512792 (H) THE NETHERLANDS (713) 681-4399 (H) Suzanne J. Black (RP) 563538 (0)
(713) 225-7600 (0) c/o Allied Bank DOMINICAN REPUBLIC ISRAEL
Alexander L. Barge (RP, AA)
Ethan G. Book (RP) Weissenbruchstraat 253 2596 GH
George A. Giagtzis (RP, AA) P.O. Box 3944 Simon Hakim (RP) Den Haag, The Netherlands
Nassau NP, Bahamas c/o Bank of America NT&SA
3100 Jeanetta #906 P.O. Box 1373 P.o. Box 1348 070-280083 (H)
Houston, TX 77063 (809) 322-8992 (0)
Santo Domingo, Dom Rep Ramat Hasharson, Israel 010149777 (0)
(713) 974-4239 (H) BAHRAIN 5671375 (H) 0348454 7 (H) (713) 651-0641 (0) NIGERIA
John House 6896121 (0) Adrienne Wayne (RP)
Bernard J.w H. Miedema (RP, AA) Kuwait Asia Bank Palace Hotel (MSA, OVDA) Caroline S. Ufaeyen (RP)
8327 W. Tidwell #1404 Iko! Abia P.O. Box 20501 277 Hayarkon Ikam PA Houston, TX 77040 Manama, Bahrain Tel Aviv, Israel
(713) 939-1169 (H) Cross River State, Nigeria 13
(713) 449-2000 (0)
Continued on page 15
ITT Lecture Series
Focuses on Latin Atnerica
The International Telephone and
Telegraph Corporation, which has
sponsored Key Issue Lecture Series
at colleges and universities
throughout the country since 1973,
selected AGSIM as the site for one
of its 1981-82 programs.
The theme of the series at Amer­ican
Graduate School of Interna­tional
Management is "Latin
American Economic Development:
A Progress Report."
The program, comprised of seven
lectures presented by experts on
Latin America, covers economic,
political and social topics. The
series is being directed by Professor
Joaquin Duarte, Chairman of the
International Studies Department.
In discussing the rationale for
focusing on Latin America, Duarte
noted that no geographic region in
the developing world offers better
opportunities for trade and invest­ment
with the U.S., Europe and
Japan than does Latin America. He
called Latin America a "third world
pacesetter" in such initiatives as
OPEC, the Group of 77, UNCTAD,
regional integration, regional de­velopment
banks, economic models
and even political models.
The opening lecture was pre­sented
by Baltazar Ponguta, chief
economist, VITRO, Monterrey,
N.L., Mexico, who discussed The
Evolving Mexican Economy on
November 5, in the Valley Bank
Center concourse in downtown
Phoenix.
Calling oil wealth the key to
Mexico's growth, Ponguta pointed
out that the peso will increase in
value and the country's manufac­tured
goods will not be able to
compete in export markets if Mex­ico
exports too much oil. Converse­ly,
exporting too little oil will pro­duce
a trade deficit.
He also listed several of what he
called structural problems in Mex­ico
that need attention. Included
14
Baltazar Ponguta, chief economist, VITRO,
Monterrey, N.L. , Mexico, kicked off the
ITT Key Issues Lecture Series in November
with a lecture on the Evolving Mexican
Economy.
Dr. Bernardo Grossling makes a point
during his lecture on Energy and Natural
Resources in Latin America.
were high unemployment, under­e.
mployment, a too-rapid popula­tion
growth, the concentration of
resources jobs and wealth in the
cities of Mexico City, Monterrey
and Guadalajara, poverty, and
migration to the U.S. and from ru­ral
to urban areas. Also included on
the list were inadequate roads, rail­roads,
and port facilities along with
deficiencies in hospitals and
schools. Ponguta said that these
structural problems will take a great
deal of capital, organization and
time to solve.
In discussing Mexico's oil, Pon­guta
pointed out that the country
has proven oil reserves of 72 billion
barrels, probable reserves of 58 bil­lion
barrels and potential reserves
of 250 billion barrels. With this, set
against a stable and flexible political
system, Mexico can only improve
its situation.
He stated: "In terms of opportu­nities,
Mexico is perhaps the hot­test
prospect for trade and invest­ment
in the Third World, particu­larly
with respect to the U.S."
Touching on international rela­tions,
Ponguta noted that Mexico,
as the first Latin American country
to undergo a genuine social revolu­tion,
has a considerably more posi­tive
attitude toward revolution than
the U.S. He added that Mexico has
developed a tried and true method
for dealing with the left, both
domestic and foreign, based on the
assumption "that exclusion, ostra­cism
and hostility accomplish no­thing-
while the establishment of
ties of friendship, interest and the
like produces mutual understand­ing
and cooperation."
The second speaker in the ITT
lecture series was Dr. Bernardo
Grossling, natural resources advisor
to the Inter-American Bank. A
noted geophysicist and expert on
world energy, Dr. Grossling lec­tured
as a private scientist and dis­cussed
Energy and Natural Re­sources
in Latin America. Speaking
in the auditorium on campus on
January 21, Grossling stated that
the amount of undiscovered oil in
the world may be two to three
times larger than is commonly per­ceived.
He noted that the eventual
depletion of the earth's petroleum
resources would occur within a few
decades at worst, and in not more
than a century at best, if a reason-
THE THUNDERBIRD SPRING 1982
able rate of economic growth con­tinues
(three percent per year or
so). He sees solutions to the world
energy crisis as hydro-electricity,
biomass, solar energy and fusion,
the still unbridled form of nuclear
energy. He pointed out, however,
that to reach this new energy
plateau, the next 30 to 50 years will
be crucial. "Most societies are left
only with the petroleum option to
fill the energy gap in the required
time," he said, "and this oil bridge
is crucial."
Likening the world energy crisis
to a war scenario, Grossling noted
that certain unknown factors can
suddenly and drastically turn the
entire machinery on a different
course-but not necessarily a nega­tive
course. He thinks it is conceiv­able
that a breakthrough in fusion
could occur, allowing large quanti­ties
of energy at a very low cost to
become available, or that possibly
five to ten more exceptionally large
petroleum accumulations may be
found, upsetting the energy scena­rio
for two or three decades. It may
also be that the conversion of solar
energy to electricity may provide
Contacts Continued from page 13 PORTUGAL Diane Huth (RP)
Casa Amarela
NORWAY Rua das Nogueiras
Christian Falck-Pedersen (RP) 2750 Torre
Nobelsgt 1 Cascals, Portugal
Oslo 11, Norway 289410 (H)
2124633 (0) 964471 (0)
Jan A Strangel (RP) Marvin R Huth (RP)
Aasterudvn 1 6A Casa Amarela
N-1344 Haslum, Norway Rua das Noguelras
(02)532526 (H) 2750 Torre
(02)254250 (0) Cascais. Portugal
289410 (H)
PAKISTAN 964471 (0)
Ashfaq A. Ouettawala (RP AA) c/o Bankers EqUity lid SAUDI ARABIA
Dr Z,auddln Ahmed Rd Gary E Adams (RP)
State life Bldg. #3 UCAIA & A
Karachi. Pakistan Bldg 07-043
cheaper electricity than hydroelec­tricity,
or that perhaps even an en­tirely
new source of energy may be
discovered.
With regard to Latin America and
the energy problem, Grossling
noted that while some Latin Amer­ican
countries have suffered heavy
balance of payments problems be­cause
of their dependence on pe­troleum
imports, others are self­sufficient
or have a surplus of pe­troleum
to export. He contends that
Mexico will con tinue to merge as
probably the most outstanding pe­troleum
country in the world, and
the heavy crude oil of the Orinoco
Belt in Venezuela appears to be an
economically viable resource.
Because of its geography and
climatic conditions, Latin America
is well endowed with hydroelectric
resources-in fact some of the
largest hydroelectric projects in the
world exist there, and several coun­tries
make wide use of this source
of power.
Apparent as it is that Mexico,
Venezuela and Trinidad have re­maining
petroleum resources that
have an impact on world markets,
Grossling estimates that soon there
will also be important petroleum
discoveries in other countries­Argentina,
Colombia, Peru and
Bolivia for instance.
In summa tion, Dr. Grossling
said, "that in solving the world
energy crisis what is at stake is not
the failure of certain efforts here
and there, but the stability of mod­ern
civilization."
Lecturers and their topics in the
series include: Dr. Steven Klees,
College of Education, Florida State
University, discussing Communica­tions
in Latin America; Senator
Leonardo Montiel Ortega, oil and
economic development expert in
the Venezuelan Senate, lecturing
on Venezuela Today; Dr. Albert
Fishlow, director, Councilium on
International and Area Studies,
Yale University, who will talk about
Financing Economic Development
in Latin America; Dr. Luiz Felipe
Palrneira Lampreia, minister,
Embassy of Brazil, lecturing on
Brazilian Economic Progress; and
Dr. Torn La Belle, associate dean of
student and academic affairs, Uni-
Continued on page 24
Roger N Voegele (RP) Barton L Hartzell (RP) James P Rooney (RP)
clo Hazar Est Calle Marbella 62 c/o JP Rooney & Assoc
PO. Box 41699 Apto lB P.O Box 11 ·1238
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia Madrid 34 Spain Bangkok. Thailand
014789719 (0) Elizabeth J Nelson (RP, AA) 234-3031 (H)
SINGAPORE c/o Chase Manhattan Bank NA 251 -2323 (0)
Michael M Brooks (RP) Apartado 972 TUNISIA
clo Insurance Co. of N America
Paseo De La Castillana 31 Scott K Johnson (RP)
SE ASia Regional Office Madrid 1, Spain Apt 10 Immeubleu Rehne 2
14th H Clifford Centre SUDAN Cite MahraJane
Singapore 0104, Singapore Michael Phelps (RP, AA) Tunis, Tunisia
7340818 (h) clo U N IHlgh Comm. for Refugees TURKEY 436111 (0) POBox 2560
James W Echle (RP. AA) Khartoum. Sudan
Murat A. liter (RP)
23 G Venus Mansion 81243/81250 (0) Farabl Sokak No. 3/5
Peck Hay Rd
Cankaya
Singapore 0922. Singapore SWEDEN Ankara, Turkey
2356204 (H) Claus T. Morch (RP) VENEZUELA
2540819 (0) Ekeby Skogsv 15 Mitchell K McMurry (RP)
clo Royal Commission For Jublal 18265 DJursholm. Sweden Richard l. Hasenpflug (AA) 087531345 (H)
clo Bank of Montreal
PANAMA Jubial, Saudi Arabia 10 Sunset Crescent 087531620 (0)
Apartado Postal 68415
Michael C. Pierce (RP) 3417428 (H) Clementi Park Altamina 1062
PSC Box 2946 3416532 (0) Singapore 2159. Singapore SWITZERLAND Caracas, Venezuela
APO Miami, FL 34002 Edward C. Auble (RP) 4686907 (H) Bernhard G F Edgar (RP AA) 324275 (0)
PARAGUAY Allco, Saudi Arabia 914068 (0) Oberhasll 3 Suzy A Sagy Kulcsar (RP)
Perry E. Ball (RP)
Fluor Arabia lid. Bldg James W. Stewart (RP) St Niklausen Apartado 51228
P.O. Box 474 Al0 NO. 7 Orange Grove Rd. 6005 Lucerne. SWitzerland Caracas 105A, Venezuela
clo American Embassy AI -Kobar, Saudi Arabia Singapore 1025, Singapore (041) 442466 (0) 745169 (H)
Avda McaL Lopez 1776
John R Svalander (RP. AA) 2394442 (0)
AsunCion. Paraguay Eugene H. Castle (RP. AA) William A Wagner (RP)
201 ·041 /49 (0) clo U S Army Project Office clo Wabco Trade Co c/o BP Chemicals (Suisse) SA WEST GERMANY
John P Zavala (RP) PO Box 5305 Room 516 · 5th FI Orchard Tower PO. Box 291 Gunter H Kohlke (RP)
Riyadh. Saudi Arabia 400 Orchard Road CH-1211 Geneva, Switzerland
Calle Caballero 184 Singapore 0923. Singapore (022) 467747 (0) An der E,skaut 46
AsunCion. Paraguay Michael F Chahine 6390 USlngenfTS
49164 (0) clo Saudi American Bank 2353410 (H) TAIWAN West Germany
po. Box 180 2543678 (0)
lillian l. Tung (RP) 0608114245 (H)
PERU Dhahrain Airport SOUTH AFRICA 45th Floor 32 018141373 (0)
Mahlon Atkinson Barash Dhahrain, Saudi Arabia Thomas J. Smolenski (RP) Alley 3 Lane 929 Andrew R Kreinik (RP)
Avenida Espana 386 Harry A. Cockrell (RP) 173 West St Min Sheng East Road Hamburger Str 2-4
lima, Peru PO. Box 34 Sandown Taipei. Taiwan 5000 Keeln 1, West Germany
226-324 (H) Riyadh, Saudi Arabia Sandton 219, South Africa THAILAND (0221) 13·17 53
286-200 ex 430. 437 (0)
Phillip J. Gibson (RP) 7834349 (H) Axel Mees (RP)
415700 (0) Thermchai Phinyawatana (RP) PHILIPPINES clo Alexander & Alexander clo Ylpintsoi Finance lid Ungererstr 19/24
Mary Baron (RP) PO. Box 2041 SPAIN 475 Sri Ayudhya Rd 8000 Munich 40. West Germany
c/o Inti School P.O Box 323 Riyadh, Saudi Arabia Harold D Brown (RP) Phayathal
Commercial Ctr. Makati clo Sterwln Espanola SA Bangkok 4. Thailand
Metro Manila 3117, Philippines Av Del Gen. Peron 27-4 24534012 (0)
Madrid, Spain
THE THUNDERBIRD SPRING 1982 15
CLASS OF '47
Robert Anderson visited campus in Novem­ber-
the first time since graduation. He is
president of Langan Haeger, Vincent &
Born, Inc., in Wheaton, II. William E.
Bierer is with the office of the auditor
general, State of Arizona, in Phoenix.
Robert L. McIntire retired from Sears in
April '81 and is now living in Philadelphia.
William L. Schaeffer has joined Litton
International Development Corp. as
integrated logistics support manager on a
Saudi Arabia project for the company. Stan
Scharf, who is retired, writes that he had
lunch with Jolly Backer in London in
September. It was their first meeting since
1947! Jolly is vice president, Phillips
Petroleum.
CLASS OF '48 and '49
John D. Henson ('48) has been elected a
director of the International Center of
Florida. He was also elected a vice president
of the Florida Exporters and Importers
Association. Richard (Dick) Paltenghi ('48)
is secretary-treasurer of H.C. Macaulay
Foundry Co. in Berkeley, Ca. Thomas
Sherwin ('48) recently retired from Procter
& Gamble and he and his wife, Lillian,
reside in Mason, Oh. Robert Charles Ellis
('49) is vice president, Citibank International
in Houston. He heads up the investment
management group's international services
office. He travels to Mexico, the office's
principal clientele area, about six times each
year. Mary and Dwight Steffen ('49) are
enjoying retirement in North Carolina after
eight happy years in Haiti.
CLASS OF '50 and '51
Alton L. Ashley ('50) is in Minneapolis with
Engler & Budd Co., investment securities.
S.J. Buccheri (,SO), director of sales, Facet
Enterprises, Inc., Stamford, Ct., sent us an
extended update. "After spending three
years in a training program with the
international division of the Bendix
Corporation, I spent the next 19 years
working up the executive ladder. During
this period I lived in Brazil ... and Europe,
... traveling throughout the Middle East
and Africa as regional manager for Bendix
InternationaL" In 1976 Bendix was required
to divest themselves of seven automotive
component divisions, which were formed
into a new company, Facet Enterprises. He
was offered the job to establish Facet's
international sales and marketing
operations. He travels abroad extensively
for periods of five to seven weeks, but says
the work is fascinating and he never regrets
making the decision to go into this field and
16
enroll at (AIFT) AGSIM. Walter Miller
(,51), who has his own real estate
investment company, Sagamore Realty, in
Scottsdale, visited the alumni office in late
October. George Strohecker, ('51) president
of Rodeway Inn-Grand in Phoenix, paid a
visit to campus in the fall. Richard Sullivan
(,51), with Mobil Exploration Norway, Inc.
in Stavanger, Norway, sent a Norwegian
troll for the Balloon Race Auction with the
following invitation: "It is rare indeed for
anyone from AGSIM to visit Stavanger, in
spite of its importance as the oil capital of
Norway. The invitation is always open,
however. Hope someone will drop by to
say hello."
CLASS OF '52 and '53
Peter R. Cozzetto ('52) is in Minneapolis
and is president of Cesco International, Inc.
Vaneda Hupman ('52) is in Findlay, Oh.
and is head nurse at Blanchard Valley
Hospital. She writes that she and husband,
John, hope to retire in a year or so and
move south to warmer weather. Louis
Pellegrini ('52) has moved from Connecticut
to Bradenton, FI. He sends best wishes to
all. Fred Koppl ('52) writes from Munich to
advise that he is now an independent
international consultant. William Schollard,
Jr. ('53) is executive vice president of Allied
Bank International in New York. The bank
was incorrectly identified in the winter
Thunderbird. Charles T. Wood is vice
president-Europe for S.T.P. Corporation in
Ft. Lauderdale, Fl. He joined the company
in April and is enjoying the challenge of the
new position and the move to Florida.
CLASS OF '54 and '55
George Lindahl, Jr. ('54) writes from
Guatemala City where he is happily
completing his 19th year of residence. He is
manager of CIA Algodonera de America,
and adds, " ... was married April 9,
1981-very, very happy." Rob Risher ('55)
is assistant to the director of the
International Holistic Center, Inc., a
Phoenix-based worldwide health
networking organization.
CLASS OF '56
Eugene L. Box is an account executive with
Bateman, Eichler, Hill, Richards in Santa
Rosa, Ca. He says, "I hope to visit T-Bird
during 1982. Until then, I send all my
friendship and best wishes for good health
and good fortune." Jack Butefish is
president of GDI (Group Dynamics, Inc.) in
Santa Monica, Ca. Narce Caliva writes:
"Sorry I won't be able to make it to sunny
and warm Arizona in December for our
Silver Reunion. Instead, I will be here in
cold, snowy West Germany ... but
thinking of you. Upon graduation I joined
Ebasco International Corp. in New York,
later switched to International
Graphoanalysis Society in Missouri, and in
1959 joined the American Red Cross staff.
During the past 22 years I've had numerous
Red Cross assignments, including overseas
tours at Seville, Spain; Friedberg, Germany;
Saigon; Camp 2ama, Japan, and this second
time in Germany, at Stuttgart, where I'm in
charge of A.R.c. in Europe and the Middle
East. I hope life has treated each of you at
least equally as well. I will look forward to
hearing about you and our reunion."
Norman Capps is in Kansas City, Mo. and
is president of E.C.P.I., a firm in the
computer education field. Diane Connelly
has her own real estate investment
company in Phoenix. Robert G. Connelly is
self-employed as a management consultant
and lives in Billings, Mt. Robert M. Cottam
is living in Fair Oaks, Ca. and is retired.
H.P. (Dan) Daniels is with Eli Lilly & Co.
in Indianapolis in corporate new product
planning. Carroll E. Dolan is in Boston.
Lost from our files since 1964, Carroll's
reply card indicates he has received his
C. L. U. Robert M. Duin is in Houston with
Chase Bank International as second vice
president, manager, private banking. Mrs.
William (Sammy Dunn) Armstrong sends
best wishes to all from Lubbock, Tx. Lyle
V. Fredrickson is associated with Anthony
M. Guzzardo, landscape architects and land
planners in San Francisco. Shiela M.
Hansen, spouse of the late Herb Hansen
writes: " ... there are so many memories
associated with Thunderbird. Our son,
Clark, was born at the school." Shiela is still
using her Spanish and says, "have a
wonderful gathering and drink a toast for
me to Thunderbird." Walter G. Hodges is
chairman, English, humanities, journalism
and philosophy department, Mesa
Community College, Mesa, Az. Mimi
Kennedy resigned from her job with the
phone company in Tennessee so as to have
more time for travel and golf. Harry
Kratoville is export manager for Labelon
Corporation in Canandaigna, N. Y. Herman
Kuznicki is president of Creative Power
Corp., a company that specializes in oil
drilling, and in using new techniques to
rework and rebuild old, abandoned oil
wells. He is based in Hamburg, N.Y.
Addison L. Luce, Jr. is in London with the
Bank of Montreal as vice president. William
Merriam, Jr. is president of INTRUSCO
Corp., the insurance subSidiary of the
International Trust Co. of Liberia, an
international banking company. He has
been in Monrovia for three years. Harold
Miller is owner and president of Gulf States
Beauty Supply Co., Inc. in Birmingham, AI.
He writes: " ... sorry we cannot be with
you for the reunion-it is our busy time of
year. Best regards to all." Earl M. Morgan
is managing director, international, for Ag
Chemical Group, FMC Corp., in
Philadelphia. Karl E. Ringer is in San
Francisco where he is vice president and
general manager of Towers, Perrin, Forster
and Crosby, a reinsurance company.
Thomas Rogers sent best wishes to his
classmates of '56 and to faculty friends. He
is in Hong Kong as director, China/Hong
THE THUNDERBIRD SPRING 1982
W.L.(Larry) Schaeffer '47 Robert C. Ellis '49
t
r
Charles T. Wood '53 Eugene Box '56
Earl Morgan '56 W.M. " Bill" Anderson '57
Norman Blanchard '59 Gerald H. Kangas '60
Christo! J. Scheiffele '62 E. Wesley DuChemin '62
I. I THE THUNDERBIRD SPRING 1982
L
Kong for all of Monsanto Company's .
business. Since leaving campus he and wife
Maplette have been in Argentina, Brazil,
Canada and the U.S. During a spring
semester sabbatical, Robert M.
Smetherman, a professor of history at
California State University-Fresno, is
working on a project dealing with U.S.
involvement (both capital and technical
assistance) in the development of the
Mexican oil industry. Warren StelzmilIer is
senior auditor with Pacific Missile Test
Center at Point Muger, Ca. He sent best
wishes to all who attended the Silver
Reunion. W.R. Tiernay is area vice
president for Philip Morris International in
Miami. Clark Warren sent best wishes for
the reunion. He is in San Juan and is senior
vice president and regional director for the
Dominican Republic, Mexico, Puerto Rico
and Venezuela for Young and Rubicam
International. W.A. (Winn) Wyman is
general manager, marine tran~portation for
Gulf Trading and Transportation Co. m
Houston. Ladimir Joseph Zvanovec sent a
letter from R.I. to his classmates: "Wish I
could join you, but, no way . .. . the
Spanish Larry (Finney) and Frank Gackle)
pounded in stood me in good stead and I'm
still using it for both business and pleasure.
Paul's (Wilson) input was plenty useful too.
Matter of fact, that year at T-Bird was a real
turning point. My Navy career was heavi~y
influenced by it, and I carne out a speCialist
in Latin American politico-military strategic
planning. Now that I've retired, I'm in the
foreign lnilitary sales field, applY!ng both.
the Navy experience and the T-Blrd trammg
in equal measure. Best wishes to all ...
Bob, Glo, are you there? How about you,
Burr, Lou .. . maybe a moment of silence
to remember Read and Doc Schurz."
CLASS OF '57
William (Bill) Anderson has been named
president and CEO of Ca!ladian ~anoir
Industries, Ltd., a Canadian holdmg
company with business interests in several
locations in the U.s. , Mexico and Italy. He
and his wife, Claudia, public relations
director of Humber Memorial Hospital,
reside in Toronto. Bill adds: "We have been
working out of the U.S. for 15 of the 25
years since graduation. Another five were
spent in domestic international
assignments. We've enjoyed all of it and
credit Thunderbird with helping to start us
on this life path." Richard Cummings and
spouse, Dorothy, visited campus in October
from Walnut Creek, Ca., where Richard is
president of Burr-Cummings & Associates,
Inc. Donald F. Schroeder represented
AGSIM at the inauguration of President
Christophersen of Colorado State
University. Don is president of Frontier
Tractor and Equipment, Inc. in Fort Collins.
Also in Fort Collins is Gerald P. Thomas, a
teacher of English as a foreign language at
Colorado State University.
CLASS OF '58
Lloyd N. Darden is located in Santa Ana,
Ca., where he has his own marketing firm .
Spouse, Dotty, is manager of Cardillo
Travel in San Juan Capistrano. Ham
Dethero is senior vice president of Crocker
Bank in San Francisco. Alvin G. Fritzner is
in Jardines del PedregaI, Mexico. Walter
Kellogg has joined National Can Corp. and
is in Naperville, II.
CLASS OF '59
G. David Akerberg is in Knoxville, Tn.,
where he has his own business, David
Akerberg Skincare Center. He writes, " .
have been back in the U.S. since 1973.
Spent 20 years living in Germany, Spain,
Mexico, Hong Kong . .. was very
successful. . everyone treated me well .
very happy, but there is only one place to
live in the world-the good old U.S.A."
Norman Blanchard has been appointed
president of SmithKline Animal Health
Products. He joined the company in 1972 as
area director for Europe and the United
Kingdom, and was named vice president,
international operations in 1976. John R.
Burdick is a population officer with A.I.D.
in Dar-es-Salaam, Tanzania . George L.
Reeves is president, Chase Bank, S.A. in
Buenos Aires. Jack Van Bergen writes from
La Paz, Bolivia, where he is vice president
and manager for Bank of America: "My
family and I have enjoyed our assignment
in Bolivia for the last two years .. . a very
challenging banking experience."
CLASS OF '60 and '61
Donald I. Brenteson ('60) is in Tempe, Az. ,
where he owns Brenteson's Wholesale
Christmas Tree Flock and Accessories Co.
Gerald H. Kangas ('60) was recently
honored by his undergraduate school,
Willamette University, Salem, Or. He was
presented an alumni citation, one of five
awards presented annually to alumni of
Willamette judged to be particularly
outstanding in their professional and
personal lives. Gerry is director, Bahrain
Bankers Training Center and continues to
be active in the AGSIM alumni group there.
He is consistent in directing prospective
students to campus. John B. Carter (,60), is
senior vice president and executive creative
director at Ogilvy and Mather, Inc. in Los
Angeles. Gene Lee Bennett ('60) is senior
vice president, National Bank of North
America, in New York. Kenneth L. Bennett
(,61), who is general sales manager for
W.D. Warren Co. in West Germany, visited
campus in December for the first time ~ince
graduating. He was accompanied by hiS
wife, Ursula, daughter, Karin, and son,
Christopher.
CLASS OF '62 and '63
Alan Blank ('62) a lost alum for some years,
phoned to tell us he is in Eugene, Or. , and
is self-employed as a nature photographer.
He also announced that the Blanks are
expecting their first child in March.
Theodore F. Ryan ('62) writes from the
D.C. area, where he is vice president,
marketing, government services division,
Electronic Data Systems: " .. . returned to
the U.s. in January after three years in
Singapore directing EDS' Asian operations.
After 10 months of commuting to Mexico
weekly, I took over responsibility for all
EDS marketing to the federal government."
Christof J. Scheiffele (' 62) is country
director for CARE-Cameroon. He had
been stationed in Bangladesh. The
assignment in Cameroon is his eighth
posting with CARE since he graduated. He
17
adds that the program there is mostly the
development of potable water sources for
the villagers in the rural areas of the north
and east of the country, and that an
extensive reforestation program is now in
the planning stages. Alexander U. Toschi
('62) is senior vice president for the National
Foreign Trade Council. Edmund Wesley
DuChemin ('63) is general manager of
Mallinckrodt in Rio de Janeiro. His wife,
Joan, visited campus in November.
CLASS OF '64
Brice Atkinson is a program coordinator,
employment security department, for the
State of Washington. John R. Baker is
director of international marketing and sales
for Soule Steel Co. in Carson, Ca. He
received his M.A. in 1970. J.G. Buchmann,
field landman with the Northwestern
division, exploration and production group
of Phillips Petroleum Co. in Englewood,
Co., visited campus over the holidays.
Michael DeBakey is based in Lima, Peru
and is involved in tourism, aviation, hotels
and mining as an investor-developer. He
has offices in Houston and Miami. Dennis
J. Donahue writes from Ashland, Or.:
"Decided it would be more fun working for
myself than someone else-so retired from
the multinational corporate life and am
enjoying it." Dennis has his own property
development company. Luis M. Garcia is
with Carnation International in Los
Angeles. Robert J. Gehl is president of
Tempotech Industries in Hart, Mi. Judi and
Mitch Summers write from Washington,
D.C., where Mitch is manager of
international affairs for ARMCO, Inc. They
had been in Tehran to open the ARMCO
office and were there for four years, leaving
in December '77. They then went to
Brussels for two years until Mitch received
his assignment in Washington in January
'80. Judi advises that the return to the
States was quite a shock after 15 years
abroad. They are all settled in and Judi has
opened a business of antique French prints
and posters.
CLASS OF '65 and '66
Eric Aguero ('65) is marketing planning
manager, ophthalmics, for Alcon Universal,
Ltd. in Fort Worth. Ben H. Barteldes ('65) is
general manager, Torin Aerotecnica Ltda.,
in Jan Jose Dos Campos, Brazil. The
company is a subsidiary of Torin
Corporation, Torrington, Ct. John de Leon
('65) is international employee relations
manager for FMC Corporation in Chicago.
Edward M. Baltrusaitis ('66) is in Stamford,
Ct. and is export manager, Central and
South America sales for R.T. Vanderbilt
Corporation. Gerald H. Green ('66) is
president and general manager for Foto
Interamericana de Venezuela, S.A. and is
based in Caracas. Christian Larsen, Jr. ('66)
writes from North Carolina: "Finally gave
up commuting to move to Rocky Mount,
N.C. and have purchased a company which
manufactures upholstered furniture for the
mobile home industry. We plan to expand
sales to both retail and export markets. Wife
Eleanor, son Christian and daughter Missie
all well."
18
CLASS OF '67
S. Wayne Bee is in Kohler, Wi. with Kohler
Co. as manager, field sales, international
engine division. Fred L. Bollerer has been
elected an executive vice president of First
City Bancorporation of Texas. He is
responsible for corporate development,
including strategic planning, economics and
technology planning. Bruce S. Derkask is
with PepsiCo., Inc. as director of marketing,
food service international division, the
company's overseas fast food operations.
Evan L. Hand has been promoted to
commercial section manager, supply
division marketing, Owens-Coming
Fiberglas Corp. in Toledo. Donald R.
Milligan is international sales manager with
CooperVision Systems/Cavitron in Irvine,
Ca. J. Mark Paden has been named senior
vice president, director, Latin American
area, international division, of the North
Carolina National Bank in Charlotte. Joel T.
Wineburgh is in New York and is vice
president of Cometals Inc., a trading and
marketing firm.
CLASS OF '68
Victor A. Baltrusaitis is in Sao Paulo and is
manager of Noranda Mines operations.
John Browning, Jr. is a public relations
executive with Chen Sam and Associates in
New York. James F. Corzine writes: "After
eight years with the agricultural chemical
industry, first with FMC Corporation and
later the Monsanto Company, we decided
to establish some 'roots' and in 1977 formed
the Interamerica Marketing Associates
Ltda." Jim's company is located in Bogota
and he sees David Ransome ('72), Peter
Moog ('66) and Bill Messett ('67). Brian
Gauler has accepted an appointment as an
international trade specialist for the State of
Oklahoma. His position is part of the
Governor's staff, but Brian will be located in
Tulsa and "on loan" to the Dallas, Tx.
district director of the U.S. Department of
Commerce. H. Reed Nelson is a property
manager for DW} Model Farms in Jerome,
Id. Rick LeSueur is general manager of the
Hole in the Wall Restaurant and Racquet
Club at the Point Resort in Phoenix.
Michael Pierce writes from Panama, where
he is an attorney: "We have been in
Panama for 11 years now and we are
looking forward to a bright future for this
country. I am on the boards of the
American Chamber of Commerce and the
American Society and am enthusiastic about
Panama's political and economic future."
Ross Quan is an economic officer with the
U.S. State Department. He is studying
Chinese at the Foreign Service Institute
through 1982 and will then go to Taipei,
with eventual assignment as economic
officer at the U.S. Embassy in Beijing,
P.R.C. Charles Smith has joined American
Saw and Manufacturing Co. in East
Longmeadow, Ma.
CLASS OF '69
John P. Barelli is an attorney in Lenexa, Ks.
and handles international business
consulting, investments and general
corporate law. He visited campus in
October and addressed a student group.
Stephen C. Burrell spent most of '81 in
Australia landing a $500 million contract for
John R. Baker '64 Ben Barteldes '65
design and construction of an oil and gas
processing complex for Davy McKee
Corporation. Charles W. Gameros has been
appointed assistant director in the
casualty-property personal lines department
at The Travelers Insurance Companies in
Hartford, Ct. Dennis Giacone, who joined a
bank in San Francisco after graduation and
then spent some time with an international
vegetable oil trading, marketing and
processing company, is now in Phoenix. He
is executive vice president of Valley Seed
Company. The company's research division
is doing business in Spain and Ireland and
hopes to expand to other countries in
Europe and eventually South America.
Donald Ray Hedgpeth is in Alta Loma, Ca.
after spending several years in Saudi Arabia
and the United Arab Emirates. Larry R.
Lamb is in Portland, Or., where he has his
own firm, Lamb Industries, Inc. John
O'Detto is branch manager for First
Interstate Bank of California's San
Bernadino branch. Allen B. Pease is senior
attorney with Williams Brothers Engineering
Company in Tulsa, Ok. John C. Polhemus
is president, Goodyear-Philippines and lives
in Manila. He writes: "After short
assignments in Argentina and Peru,
returned to the Far East in August '81 as
general manager, president. Naturally,
entire family was happy to return to most
interesting and dynamic part of the world."
John William Stanger visited campus from
Lake Forest, n. He is senior representative
for the Toronto-Dominion Bank in Chicago.
He reports that he's seen Fred Broom, area
finance manager, J.1. Case, Racine, Wi. and
Dana Schneider, vice president,
international, First Wisconsin Bank in
Milwaukee. Mark C. Wilson is in Houston
where he is president of his own company,
MCW Investments.
CLASS OF '70
Novatan Alfredo Fernandez-Bussy has been
appointed vice president of Crocker Bank,
San Francisco. Douglas H. Lemmonds is
vice president of Bank of America in
Washington, D.C. John Mcintyre has been
elected a vice president of Cunningham and
Walsh Inc. advertising agency in New York.
Michiaki Mano was transferred in
November by Hitachi, Ltd. to Hong Kong
as finance and administration manager of
their subsidiary, Hitachi Elevator
Engineering. John Muncy is vice president
of Wells Fargo Bank and is regional
manager, Southeast Asia and India. He
moved from Bangkok to Singapore in June
'80. Taking up running for exercise, John
has run two marathons, one in Hong Kong
THE THUNDERBIRD SPRING 1982
Gerald Greene '66 J. Mark Paden '67
James F. Corzine '68 Dennis C. Giacone '69
Charles W. Gameros '69 John C. Polhemus '69
Brian Gauler '69 Peter Wallin 73
John Sandor 73 Ernie Escobedo 73
THE THUNDERBIRD SPRING 1982
and another in Honolulu. Joseph W.
Nichols is vice president, international
department with Johnson & Higgins in New
York. Tom O'Keefe writes that he is
god-father to Susan and Len Holzworth's
son, Reed. Goeran Peters and LeAnne
(Secunda) Peters are in New Orleans, La.
where Goeran is director of Scardex Steel.
Tom Waters is director, sales, Pacific Coast,
Hapag-Lloyd in San Francisco. Charles M.
Weeks is in San Diego and has his own
firm, Weeks & Associates, an international
franchise consultant company.
CLASS OF'71
Robert Charles Hill is general director of
Banco Lar Brusilero in Rio de Janeiro.
Richard K. Phillips is currently regional
manager for Motorola Communication for
Central America and the Caribbean and
lives in Boca Raton, Fl. Franc Rocheieau is
in Golden, Co. with Georgia Boot as
managing representative and territory
manager. He has recently married, and
says, "I couldn't be happier." Marcos L.
Sanchez is with John Deere Co. as area
service manager in Bogota
CLASS OF'72
Leonard J. Black is manager, marketing and
planning, international development
markets for Duracell International, Inc. and
is based in Bethel, Ct. He travels
throughout the Far East, South America,
Mexico and Europe. Gary Buckingham is
general manager, Brazil, for the insurance
firm, Interamericana Companhia de Seguros
in Rio de Janeiro. Tnteramericana is a
member company of AlG, Inc. Gary A.
Burkhardt has been promoted to vice
president of affiliated corporations for
Presbyterian/St. Lukes Medical Center in
Denver. Malcolm H. Byrnes, II has been
appointed as advisory director of
international finance of International
Business Associates Corporation in Austin,
Tx. Ernest Escobedo is marketing manager,
Latin America for Babcock, International,
Inc. in Houston. He writes: " ... have been
back in the U.S. for four years (from
Brazilian two-year assignment). I just
returned to my home state of Texas and
things are looking great career-wise." David
Jaworski recently transferred with Farm and
Home Savings from Kansas City, Mo., to
Dallas, where he is vice president. David E.
Logie has been promoted to director of
international operations at Life Insurance
Marketing and Research Association
(LIMRA) in Hartford, Ct. Gary Miller,
accounts executive and vice president for
National Westminster Bank, Ltd. in
Chicago, has joined the evening faculty at
Elmhurst College in Elmhurst, II. He
teaches international marketing. Howard T.
Mott is vice preSident of Nederlandsche
Middenstandsbank N.V. in New York.
Louis Joseph Pitney is president of
Meridien Trade K.K., an international
marketing and trading company in Tokyo.
B. Michael Powell, Jr. is vice president
with AlG, Inc. in Tokyo, Gary Roberts has
accepted a new position as export manager
with Frederick and Nelson, a major
department store chain in the Pacific
Northwest, and a division of Marshall Field
& Co. He will be responsible for developing
and executing an export program for the
company's brand food products, a new
activity for the store. Charles Rudolf is
managing director of Gentex International,
Tnr in Dalton, Pa. Al Welch resigned from
Republic Steel Corporation and moved to
the Dallas area with his recent bride, Cindy.
They have opened a video and record store,
Welch's Flicks and Tunes, in Rockwall, Tx.
CLASS OF '73
Jerry Allen is senior product manager,
frozen food confections, Knudson
Corporation in Los Angeles. Donald N.
(Nick) Anderson visited campus recently
from Seattle, where he is district manager of
AmerFord International Corporation, an air
and ocean freight forwarding company. R.
Kelley Gibbs visited campus in November
from Corte Madera, Ca., where he is with
Gibbs Brothers ACV (air cushion vehicles).
Beverly Moschel Hirsekorn is a marketing
research specialist for Petroleum
Information Corporation in Denver. Ollie
Jakob has transferred to Continental Plastics
Industries, international operations, as the
senior financial analyst from his post as
international accountant and controller with
Continental Forest Industries, export
division. Ollie is now based in Houston.
Daniel T. Johnston has been appointed
financial services officer for First National
Bank and Trust Co. of Dickinson, ND.
Jeffrey William Koehler is sales manager
for Jack Bradley Realty Co. in Put-in-Bay,
Oh. Mark Mischnick is with the
international department of the Republic
National Bank of Dallas. Jorge Padilla de
Alba is located in Asuncion, Paraguay,
where he is general manager of The First
National Bank of Boston branch. John
Sandor has been named vice director, Asia,
for Philip Morris, Inc. and is located in
Tokyo. Steve Sischka is a partner in Olsen's
Chino Valley Grain Co. in Prescott, Az. He
tells us, ". . . been a partner in an
expanding feed and grain operation with
two stores in northern Arizona and a third
on the way. William M. Tucker, Jr. is sales
manager for Stribling-Puckett, Inc. in
Jackson, Ms. Paul Kelley Wagner is
manager, finance, for Caterpillar in Sao
Paulo. Hal T. Walker is traffic manager for
construction of an Israeli airbase and is
based in Tel Aviv. Peter Wallin has been
residing in Caracas since 1979 and is a
representative of London American Finance
Corporation Ltd. (subsidiary of Midland
Bank, London).
CLASS OF '74
Brad Bradley is a partner in the law firm,
Bradley and Scheulhammer in Dallas.
Patiste G. Bronos writes from Miami: "We
have been (here) for over a year. Previous
assignments with World Courier were in
Greece, Iran, Nigeria, Argentina, Spain and
New York." A. William Charlton is
assistant vice president with Southeast Bank
in Miami. He is in charge of Venezuela,
Panama, Colombia, Ecuador and Peru.
William G. Drewes has been elected a vice
president in the multinational banking
services department of Continental lllinois
National Bank and Trust Co. of Chicago.
Douglas K. Funk is publisher of Made in
Mexico, an international business magazine.
Their second issue of 1981 featured an
exclusive interview with Bernardo Garza
19
Sada, executive director of the Alpha
Industrial Group. Sandra M. Harrison is in
France and is working as a management
supervisor for Grey France. Adolph A.
Hoehling has been general manager for
Citibank in Atlanta since July '80 when he
moved from Ecuador, where he had been
for two years. Lance Keeler, who has been
an assistant vice president with
Manufacturers Hanover Trust Co. in New
York, has transferred to the Frankfurt
branch for a three year assignment. He will
be calling on corporate customers in the
area. Kyung Lee has been promoted to vice
president of Conti-Commodity Services and
was the top ranking producer in Conti in
1981. Marikay Lee-Martinez is an attorney
with the Internal Revenue Service in
Phoenix. Donald J. McLane has been
elected vice president and general manager
of Doboy Packaging Machinery division of
Nordson Corporation. He joined Nordson
Canada, Ltd. in 1975 and served as area
manager and national sales manager. He
also was national sales manager for the
finishing equipment division before being
named general manager for Doboy in 1979.
Gregory John McDonald has been name~
marketing director for the Colgate PalmolIve
subsidiary in Argentina and has moved
from Mexico to Buenos Aires. Paul Nielsen
has been promoted to national accounts
manager for James A. Old & Son Material
Handling Co. in San Carlos, Ca. He is
developing marketing and procurement
functions for all national accounts. Thomas
F. O'Dea has been appointed assistant dean
of instruction at Los Angeles Harbor
College. He is in charge of the evening
outreach division serving more than 6,000
students. Tom, his wife, Marcia, and sons,
Sean and Brian, live in Woodland Hills, Ca.
Preston Pearson is a planner shceduler for
Project Engineering Services, Inc., working
with civil and petrol construction in Saudi
Arabia. Tony Rios has been appointed
export marketing/sales manager for
Champion International Corporation's
building products division in Santurce, P.R.
Mario G. Sabatini is in Woodbury, Ct. with
Timex Corporation. He is corporate
manager, product planning for solid state
products, international. Jay (James) Savage
is Asia regional manager for Plexchem
International, Inc., and is located in the
Philippines. Maribeth Sembach Rahe is vice
president, Scandinavian district, Morgan
Guaranty Bank in London. T.S. Sinha left
Texas Instruments and joined RDA
International as international marketing
manager. He is in Houston. James R.
Tencher, Jr. is a deputy representative for
Manufacturers Hanover Trust Co. in
Caracas. Arnt Vagle is now back in Noway
running his own import/export company
engaged in the video trade. William L.
Valenti is vice president and treasurer of
McDermott International Marketing Co. in
New Orleans. Andres Voto-Bernales writes
from Lima, where he has been since 1980
doing marketing for Unilever products. He
worked for E.R. Squibb & Sons from '75 to
'79 in Venezuela, Ecuador and Colombia.
20
CLASS OF '75
Raymond H. Aka has been promoted to
supervisor of a new section, financial .
administration and taxes, of Garrett Turbme
Engine Co. in Phoenix. Richard Bram, sales
representative for Blue Bell, Inc. , apparel
manufacturers in Louisville, Ky., visited
campus in mid-December. David W.
Bridewell is working for Hibernia National
Bank of New Orleans as a real estate
lending officer. Ian Campbell writes from
New York: "After five years with Shell, I
have joined Philipp Brothers (division of
Phibro Corp.) as an international oil trader.
My area is Central-South America and the
Caribbean." Alex Cohen is general manager
of the commercial collection division of Dun
& Bradstreet in The Netherlands. Vladimir
Egger is a trader with Marc Rich & Co. in
New York. Tom and Terry (Byrnes)
Fadrhonc are living in Larchmont, N.Y.
Both are account supervisors; Tom with
Needham, Harper & Steers in New York,
and Terry, with North Castle Partners in
Greenwich, Ct. They have a son, Adrian,
age 2. They see Cynthia (Leidner) Muller as
well as Willem Mock ('74) with Cargill in
Omaha, and Tom Trefts ('74) with
Carnation in Los Angeles. John A. FIasco
has been promoted to vice president/senior
credit and marketing officer for Bank of
America's main branch in Buenos Aires.
Giovanni Gangone is assistant general
manager of SCM International in Rimini,
Italy. Rod Granger, assistant branch
manager of U.S. National Bank of Oregon
in Portland, visited campus in late
December. Simon Hakim writes from Israel
that while on a business trip to Europe and
Africa, he met with Bob English ('76). In
Lagos, Nigeria, he saw Kinsley I. Ikpe ('73)
who works for Icon, Ltd. (Merchants Bank)
and has been promoted to senior manager.
He also heard from Satjiv S. Chalil, who
plans on visiting the Middle East in the
near future. Ghassan Majdalani is regional
manager for North/Central Africa and the
Middle East for the Speed Queen Co., a
Raytheon Company. Kevin O'Donnell is
director, international marketing for HPI
and is in Los Angeles. Robert J. Rosser is
assistant vice president of Hudson (Skandia)
Reinsurance Company in Hamilton,
Bermuda. Deborah Ann Smith is director of
public relations and special projects for The
Golden Door in San Diego and her sister
spa, Rancho la Puerta in Baja, Mexico. Will
F. Smith, from Houston, visited campus in
October. He is vice preisdent of Cheyenne
Services, Inc., an oil field service company.
David B. Terrar recently left Bechtel
Corporation and accepted a position as
international compensation manager for the
international nuclear division of
Westinghouse. He is located in Pittsburgh.
Carol Thoele has been named the
international executive director of
Dzierzynski & Associates in Chicago. J.
Jorge Verduzco is vice president,
international department of the
International Bank of Commerce in Laredo,
Tx. Dirk Bruno Visser has moved to Rio de
Janeiro where he is with Drexel Burnham
Lambert do Brasil, Ltda.
CLASS OF '76
Walter T. "Walt" Atkinson has been named
sales manager of Cessna Aircraft
Company's project marketing division. He
will be responsible for directing sales
programs for Cessna's propjets in the U.S.
and Canada and lives in Wichita, Ks. David
A. Barnett, III is an account executive with
the investment firm of Underwood,
Neuhaus & Co. in Houston. Linda Jean
(Haggerty) Barnett is in Houston and is
manager of budgets for Elf Aquitaine Oil &
Gas, a French company which recently
acquired Texasgulf. Bruno Cornelio has
relocated to Brunei, where he is manager of
Bank of America's branch office. Samuel
Cotterell is a C.P.A. with Arthur Andersen
& Co. in Boise, Id. Jaime Drutchas has
joined Ross Roy, Inc., an advertising agency
in Detroit. She is account supervisor on the
Upjohn account. Joe Fullop is manager,
international revenue/finance for Prime
Computer, Inc. in Natick, Ma. Garry Brent
Gammon is in San Francisco and was
promoted to general counsel for Cromemco.
Thomas Grady is with Ford Motor
Company as field manager in Teterboro, NJ.
Kirk Haws, who until recently was district
manager for Clark Equipment Co. in
Singapore, visited campus in November. He
was named regional manager for
AfricalMid-East for Clark and will be
moving to Athens, Greece soon. William
(Bill) Johnson visited the office in late
October. He is with Bucyrus Erie and lives
in Fogelsville, Pa. Peter J. Jucht is manager
for planning and business development for
American Hospital Supply Corporation in
Saint Oven L' Aumone, France. Ken
Krasney has been transferred to the Paris
office of Bankers Trust. Kohei Ogawa is in
New York and is export manager of Hai Hai
of Massachusetts, Inc. He writes: "I arrived
in New York in November '81 in my
present job. I spent almost two years
traveling the U.S. to start up the company
(a Kikkoman U.S. subsidiary). I have
brought my family to New York and will be
working here several years to expand the
export business to overseas from the U.S."
Brian D. O'Neill is second vice president
with Chase Manhattan Bank in Santiago.
Michael A. Perlino has been elected
assistant vice president of Harris Bank in
Chicago. Jeffrey L. Schneider is a product
specialist with Lanier Gmbh, near
Frankfurt. Michael W. Short is an assistant
vice president with Citibank in Nagoya,
Japan. Jerry Sullivan and Bobbie N~lson
have joined forces and formed the firm,
International Marketing Consulting in
Honolulu. Thomas (Tom) Thompson is
with Peat Marwick, Mitchell as a senior
consultant in Costa Mesa, Ca.
CLASS OF '77
Janice and Abdelkader Bachesais are in
England where Kader is area general
manager for International Standard Brands
(recently merged with Nabisco). They
moved to London in June after two years
with ISB in Athens, Greece. Robert S.
Childs visited campus from Houston: "Just
started with Gulf Oil in September '81, after
nearly two years with First City National
Bank of Houston. The balloon race was
great-but missed the Texas Club chili
cook-off." Michael D. Christenson has
THE THUNDERBIRD SPRING 1982
Paul Nielsen '74 Lance Keeler '74
Donald j. McLane '74 Bruno Comella '76
Jamie Drutchas '76 Michael Per/ina '76
James Emslie '77 Barbara B. Kamm '77
Steve Gandy '78 Steve Zurcher '78
THE THUNDERBIRD SPRING 1982
committed to a term of extended service
with the Evangelical Lutheran Church of
Kenya. After four to five months of
language training in Swahili in Nairobi, he
will move to Kisii, where he will work as an
administrator for the church. Thomas Cole
is with American Express in Sunrise, Fl.
Patrick Consorti is director of PSA
Finanziaria Italia in Milan. Nawaf El-Assad
is area marketing manager, West Africa for
Brown & Williamson Tobacco Co. and is
located in Athens, Greece. James A. Emslie
has been promoted to vice president in the
energy division of the corporate banking
group of Security Pacific National Bank in
Los Angeles. Susan D. Arnold Guidry
writes: " ... just returned from a trip to
Paris, Algiers and Casablanca." She is
region finance manager for Paccar
International, Inc. in Bellevue, Wa. William
A. Head is presidentlbroker with Highlands
Investment Group in Evergreen, Co. Tim
Hoffman is in Houston and is marketing
manager for U.S.! International. Debra
Huffman left EDS World Corporation in
October after four years of working as a
systems engineer in Iran, The Netherlands
and Mexico. She has returned to the U.S. to
obtain a masters degree in MIS and will be
associated with Blue Cross of Northwest
Ohio in Grand Rapids, Ohio, as a senior
programmer/analyst while completing her
degree at Bowling Green State University.
Barbara B. Kamm has been promoted to
vice president at Marine National Bank in
Santa Ana, Ca. Dennis Keithly, from
Torrance, Ca., visited campus for the
Balloon Race and tells us he is the assistant
export manager for Overseas Operations,
Inc. in Redondo Beach, Ca. Teresa King
(Silbert) visited campus over the Christmas
holidays and was accompanied by her
husband, Michael, and five-month-old
daughter, Susan. Teresa is an associate
consultant with Touche Ross & Co. in
Chicago. Jonathan E. Kranz is in New York
and is the assistant chef for Michael
Phillips. Lynn M. Kuchinski is a data base
analyst for Costal Corporation in Houston.
Charlie Lowe, who is export manager for
Overseas Operations, Inc., in Redondo
Beach, Ca., attended the Balloon Race and
visited the alumni office. Ben Miedema was
elected chairman of the Houston World
Trade Association, Young Executive Group.
Jeffrey A. Nigh has been promoted to an
international auditor with Bank of America's
Latin American/Caribbean audit division.
He will be located in Caracas. Yoshi
Noguchi visited campus recently from
Colorado, where he is marketing programs
manager, Americas/Asia operations for
Storage Technology Corporation in
Louisville. George Norton has joined Ethyl
Corporation in Baton Rouge, La. as a
salesman in their industrial and speciality
chemicals, Latin America section. Gail C.
Quinn passed the Pennsylvania c.P.A.
exam in November 'SO. She would like to
hear from other T-Birds in the Pittsburgh
area. Elizabeth Haley Roberts is a financial
analyst with the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, Washington, D.C.
Thomas J. Ryan III is branch manager for
Hershey Creamery Co. in Batavia, N.Y. He
oversees all of western New York, including
Rochester and Buffalo. James P. Scott, Jr. is
employed by Structural Dynamics Research
Corporation as marketing manager. Mark
Steinborn is regional sales manager for
Volvo of America Corporation and is based
in Hayward, Ca. Karen Stromberg is an
acquisition analyst with Ensearch, Inc. m
Dallas.
CLASS OF '78
Daniel M. Behnisch is operations manager,
U.S. operations office, Dun and Bradstreet,
International, Inc. in New York. Randall A.
Bera, along with partner James T. Edwards
has formed a firm, Hospitality Partner, Inc.
in Newport Beach, Ca. The company offers
hotel, resort and timeshare services as well
as consulting services in real estate and
financing. David L. Brothers is in the
Austin, Tx. area and is a real estate broker
and president of his own company, 06, Inc.
Karl E. Edelmann is owner/operator of
Noble Food Service in Horseheads, N.Y.
Troy Douglas Emde is in Chicago and is air
export supervisor for Max Gruenhut
International, Inc. Karl Erdman has been
promoted to manager, planning and
analysis, international consumer division of
Schering Plough in Memphis. Jeffrey Mark
Ferm is general manager for Bredero Price
Saudi Arabia Ltd. and is located in Jubail.
He is also a member of the board of
directors of the company, the largest
pipecoating company in the world. Steve
Gandy has joined Provident National Bank
in Philadelphia as assistant vice president.
He will be working in the Latin America
division. John P. Klecker is a project
accountant with Airesearch Industrial, a
division of Garrett Corporation. Tom Kraft,
who is assistant area manager for
International Harvester Export Co. in
Singapore, visited campus for the Balloon
Race. Greig S. Locker has been transferred
by Holland Chemicals International to their
Hamilton, Bermuda office, where he is
commercial manager of HCI Chemicals
(Bermuda) Ltd. Timothy C. Lund is
expeditor in the international department of
National Supply Co. in Houston. George B.
McReddie has been named banking officer
in the international banking service
department of Continental Illinois National
Bank of Chicago. Steven M. Reinbolt has
been promoted to territorial consultant in
the Southern Pacific resource center of ISU
Companies, Inc. He will provide liaison,
management and insurance consultation to
ISU independents in Orange County and
parts of Los Angeles County. Lewis W.
Ross, Jr. is an instructor-special systems, for
Cubic Corporation in San Diego. Joseph C.
Schmieder is manager, international
operations, for Oliver Products Co., a
packaging equipment manufacturer in
Grand Rapids, Mi. He writes: "Job involves
travel throughout the world, where I've met
many helpful 'Thunderbirds.' " Diane
Sherman is in Singapore with Warner
Brothers (F.E.), Inc. She writes that when in
Chile she ran into Brian D. O'Neill ('76),
second vice president with Chase
Manhattan Bank. Jan O. Skybak was
promoted as of October 1 to head up
investment and production control in
Gerresheimer Glas A.G., a subsidiary of
Owens-Illinois Inc., in Dusseldorf. Jan
sends us news that Peter Edelmann joined
Owens-Illinois in June on the
internationalist program. Eric Sletten is vice
21
president, international, of C & c. Co., an
international trading company in Scottsdale,
Az. Will Spurgeon is working for Lawrys
Foods International, Inc. as director of
marketing and sales in Maynooth, Ireland.
David Steffen is in Australia with Goodyear
International Corporation. W. Bruce Walters
has been promoted to assistant manager of
administrative document control with a
Morrison-Knudsen Company subsidiary
based in Burlingame, Ca. The company's
current project is constructing a coal mine, a
port facility and a connecting railroad line in
Colombia. Robert Whelan has been
promoted to product director at Richardson
Vicks, Inc. in Wilton, Ct. David John
Wilson has joined Pittsburgh National
Bank's international banking division as
international banking officer. Steven D.
Zurcher has been named manager of
tax-free marketing for R.J. Reynolds
Tobacco International, Inc. He will relocate
to Miami.
CLASS OF '79
Craig Adams has opened his own
import-export trading company based in
San Francisco and Grenoble, France.
Melody A. Ball is in Dallas and is product
manager for five semiconductor lines for
Hall-Mark Electronics. L.L (Shashi)
Bembalker .has joined Fluor Ocean Services
as senior construction engineer. He and his
wife, Tej, who is in manager training at
City National Bank, reside in Houston.
Kenneth A. Bonne is product manager for
Lear Siegler, Inc.lAvitron international
division in Singapore. Steve W. Brown
resigned from his position in the national
accounts division of Foreign Credit
Insurance Association in New York in
October and joined Northern Trust Co. of
Chicago's international department in their
New York Edge Act office. John C. Cook
joined Merrill Lynch International and
moved to New York from Paris in October
to obtain his securities license and company
orientation. Then its back to Brussels.
Michael Dreyer is employed by Bechtel
Petroleum as a contract/purchases agent on
the Saudi Arabian Yanbu project and he
lives in Houston. Conrad Eilts is an
assistant vice president of Chase Manhattan
Bank and is stationed in Manama, Bahrain.
He was previously with Citibank. Jeff
Fadley is in Tulsa, Ok. with Hilti-U.S.A. as
a financial analyst. Brian Farmer has been
working as assistant to the director of
finance at the new King Abdulaziz
International Airport in Saudi Arabia since
February '81. He writes, " . .. in July I
teamed up once again with my roommate
from the summer of '79. He returned to
Jeddah after six months of commodities
training in the States. The climate and
terrain here remind me a lot of Phoenix,
except it is more humid here, since we're
on the Red Sea. I've taken up scuba diving
since the coral reefs, which are just
offshore, are some of the most outstanding
in the world." Vadim Fischer was on
campus recently recruiting for Continental
Grain. He is based in St. Louis, Mo. with
the company. Robert G. Genis is president
of National Gemstone Corporation in
Phoenix. Richard J. Gibson is in Boulder,
Co. with Keith Stevens, Inc., a management
consulting firm. Andrew Scott Gleeman is
22
assistant to the preisdent at Whitehall
International, Inc. in New York. Brent W.
Godfrey visited campus in October from
New York, where he is manager,
employment and training for the Royal
Bank of Canada. Yves Gourmelen has been
transferred to the Bunker Ramo
headquarters in Oakbrook, II. and assigned
to the international division as a senior
financial analyst. Roger H. Guichard, Jr. is
with Arthur D. Little as a consultant. James
W. Hayes is manager, international trade
for Universeas Corporation in Cleveland.
Universeas is a joint venture with China
National Machinery ImportfExport Corp.,
one of the major foreign trade corporations
in the People's Republic of China. Jim adds,
"It was incorporated in September '80 with
the purpose of developing two-way trade
with the P.R.C. The company represents
U.S. companies attempting to penetrate the
China market. It also buys and sells
products on its own account and is active in
finding markets for China-made products as
well as securing buyers in China for
U.S.-made products." Darcy Hofmann was
recently sworn in as an officer in the U.S.
Foreign Service. She is scheduled to serve
in Seoul. Tom Hofmanner is assistant to an
account director at D' Arcy, Macmanus &
Masius in Zurich. He says he is happy and
life is treating him well. Yun-Jung Huang is
an account executive with Executive
Resources in San Francisco. Murat lIter,
who worked for two years in Los Angeles
for V.S.!. Corporation, is returning to
Turkey. He will be spending four months in
the military there and will resume his
business career following his military
service. Vince Jensen is marketing
representative for Latin America for Epson
America and he is based in Torrance, Ca.
Rosalie L. Johnson is a senior analyst, new
venture department, for Seagram Overseas
Sales Co. in New York. Simon R. Kings,
who is a salesman with Remco Stationers in
Santa Ana, Ca., was in Phoenix in late
September and early October
honeymooning at the Scottsdale Hilton with
his bride, Lisa-Marie Gamboa. They were
married September 26. Henry Longmire is
in AI-Khobar, Saudi Arabia, with Chase
Manhattan Bank. Sydney C. Okoye is
president of his own company, Neufeld
Dynamics, Inc. in St. Louis, Mo. The
company is an export trading company and
represents many American manufacturing
firms. They export mainly to major African
markets. Sydney says: "Our main goal is
setting up a distribution system to supply
these major African markets with all the
American products they need at competitive
prices." Edward J. Pomeroy is with
Heath/Zenith International in St. Joseph,
Mi. He is regional export manager. John
Pressler is currently marketing coordinator
for Hapag-Lloyd AG Transpacific Service
and is based in San Francisco. Emily J.
Rayes is with First National Bank of
Chicago as a trade finance representative.
Susan Rybar, with Bechtel Power
Corporation in Norwalk, Ca., visited
campus for the Balloon Race. Nancy P.
Schwartz is an underwriter with AlG in San
Francisco. She says Dick Frederickson ('69)
is a vice president at AIG. John S. Sieh has
written for the first time since he graduated
to say he's been travelling throughout the
world (30 countries). He has accepted a
position as international productions control
advisor with Cal-China (H.K.) Ltd. He
adds, " ... currently living in San Francisco
area while on a training program and
intensive language course in Chinese. In
January I shall be moving to Guangzhou,
P.R.c., where I will be one of the first
foreign businessmen to have a permanent
base in that country. In other words, I have
a T-Bird's dream job." Charles Signer is
sales administrator for Paccar International,
Inc. in Bellevue, Wa. and will be moving to
the company's Bahrain district office soon.
Peter Spielmann is controller of the lighting
division of GTE Sylvania C.A. in Caracas.
Barbara Anne Stone has been transferred
from Massachusetts to San Francisco with
Management Decision Systems, Inc. She
will act as a consultant in marketing,
representing the market response division
of MDS in the San Francisco area. Gail
Susik has been promoted to manager,
training and rrocedures for agriculture retail
enterprises 0 the J.1. Case Co. She will be
based in Racine, Wi., but will be travelling
frequently to the company's 180 retail
stores. Debra A. Thomas is a finance
representative for Latin America with Solar
Turbines, Inc. Gayle Thomas came over
from San Diego, where he is with Conti
Commodity, to attend the Balloon Race. W.
Cliff Topping is executive director of the
Tampa Bay (Fl.) International Trade
Council, according to Robert Bean ('48).
Gianni Torti, account executive, Johnson &
Higgins ItaIia, writes from Milan that, " .. .
there are dozens of T-Birds in Milan-we
are everywhere!" Theo VanderLoo is
product manager for Schering S.A. in Rio
de Janeiro. Mark von Brockdorff has joined
Korf Trading, Inc. as a ferro-alloy trader. He
and spouse, Judy, are living in Stamford,
Ct. Alexander von Gimbut is general
manager of Diversified Products
International/Amerasia Trading Company in
San Francisco. Thomas Whiting, Jr. has
been promoted to senior sales, Latin
American division of Hydril Co. in
Houston. Patricia D. Wilson writes from
Denver, where she is a marketing
representative for UPG, Inc. " .. . the oil
and gas industry is an exciting business
with many opportunities."
CLASS OF '80
Victor T. Alexander is in Jeddah, Saudi
Arabia, and is associated with Abbar &
Zainy. Debasish Banerjee is an applications
consultant with Capex Corporation in
Phoenix. Chris Becker is in New York with
Chase Manhattan's Trade Banking Group.
Edward Benizzi is with John Deere
Intercontinental, Ltd. as area manager,
product support. He visited campus
recently and will be moving to Guadalajara.
Judy (Anderson) Brown is with
Hewlett-Packard in Phoenix as a staff
engineer. Darcie Buck is in New York with
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner and Smith.
Leslie Call has left her position with SSC&B
in New York and is now located in San
Francisco with Foote, Cone &
BeldingIHonig Advertising. David D.
Chapman, marketing representative,
international industrial division, Purex
Industries, Inc., visited campus in
December from Carson, Ca. Susan Coady is
merchandise sales manager for Texscan in
THE THUNDERBIRD SPRING 1982
Barbara A. Stone '79 Kent Erickson '80
Jim Reinnoldt '81
Phoenix. Catherine P. deLong is a cost
accountant with Sperry Flight Systems in
Albuquerque, N.M. Mary Doan is a
financial analyst with Litton Industries in
Beverly Hills, Ca. Deborah C. Doyle is in
New York and is a financial analyst with
W.R. Grace & Co. Kent V. Erickson has
been named a vice president of the Grand
Hotel in Mackinac Island, Michigan. Linda
Frank is in Decatur, AI. with Disposables,
Inc. as a production coordinator. Robert
Hackett is living in Welwyn Garden City,
Hertfordshire, U.K., where he is marketing
manager, Central Africa, for SmithKIine &
French, Ltd. Dieter Hees is a marketing
representative for John Deere
Intercontinental Ltd. S.A. in Brussels.
Barbara Hochfield is in New York and is a
commodities trainee with Marc Rich & Co.
Tom Jordan visited campus and tells us he
is area manager for John Deere
Intercontinental, Ltd. He is currently living
in San Antonio and working in northern
Mexico while awaiting his residency visa to
move to Mexico. Ki Sun Jung is with the
Institute of Hospital Services in Seoul.
Ginny Krivas is a marketing coordinator
and executive assistant to the vice president
and president of Lindsay International Sales
Corporation in Houston. Javid Ladan writes
from Toronto: " ... I have decided to go
into business for myself and will be opening
it with an art show of my recent works."
Javid has her own Gallery Cafe in Toronto,
Chez Capucine. Charlie LaFond is director
of the Berlitz School in Vienna. He says the
languages taught there are English, French
and German and that they will be adding
Spanish, Italian and possibly Arabic in the
early part of 1982. Kent E. Lupberger is a
credit analyst with Chase Manhattan Bank
in New York. Jim McHatton is in Fort
Worth working for Career Marketing, Inc.
as an account executive. Brian A. Murphy
has been transferred to Santiago by AFIA.
Giovanni Pollastri has resigned from
Olivetti and joined Irving Trust Company in
THE THUNDERBIRD SPRING 1982
Milan. Eric Port has joined Capex
Corporation in Phoenix as an applications
consultant. Randy Riddell has accepted a
position as purchasing and inventory
administrator for Stuart Radiator Co. in
Gardena, Ca. Susan (Keller> Ryan is an
international credit administrator for
Datagraphix, Inc., a subsidiary of General
Dynamics. Husband Paul, is a finance
representative for Solar Turbines, Inc. a
subsidiary of Caterpillar. They live in San
Diego. Richard (Dick) Slade is a marketing
representative for IBM in Phoenix. Vickie
(Benedict) Slade is a loan officer with the
international department of the United Bank
of Arizona in Phoenix. David Mills Smelser
is a credit analyst with Southeast First
National Bank of Miami. Dianne "DeDe"
Springer is in Houston, where she is doing
some consulting for the Chamber of
Commerce and her husband, Bob, is with
the Fluor Corporation. Peter Steffen is
working for the Royal Bank of Canada,
International in their Miami office and is
expecting a foreign assignment sometime in
1982. Lindsey Stewart is an international
banking officer with First Interstate Bank of
California in Los Angeles. Anita Sur
Claricoates has accepted an assignment in
Sao Paulo with First National Bank of
Chicago. She is an international account
representative with the bank and will spend
three months in First Chicago'S office in Sao
Paulo, followed by two months in a
Brazilian bank which acts as a foreign
correspondent bank for First Chicago.
Philip Treu is assistant controller at
Marriott's Camelback Inn in Scottsdale.
Mark Unglaub resigned from United States
Lines and joined Transpacific
Transportation Company as a sales
representative in San Francisco. He adds
that Andy Kleiman ('75) was helpful in his
job search and the the T-Bird mystique really
came through for me." Willem G. Van de
Fliert is with Citibank as an account officer
in Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
CLASS OF '81
Steve Adler is territorial manager for
southern California for Elizabeth Arden,
and he lives in Seal Beach, Ca. Claudia R.
Alarcon is president of New Universal
Trading and New Universal Engineering
Co. in Cebu City, Philippines. Derene Rae
Allen is a marketing analyst with American
Express Co., Latin American consumer
financial services division, in Coral Gables,
Fl. John D. Allen has joined Dresser
Industries and is training in Ohio and will
eventually work in Houston. Abbey Alpern
is a market research analyst with Frederick
Electronics Corporation in Frederick, Md.
Karen L. Berman is director of development
for the Arthritis Foundation, Allied
Agencies Center, in Peoria, n. Mario Carra
is located in Danvers, Ma. and is working
for GTE Sylvania. Craig W. Christianson is
new business development coordinator with
the international steel division of Midwest
Corporation, Miami. Richard G. DeNatale
is an assistant account executive with Doyle
Dane Bernbach Advertising, Ltd., New
York. He writes that he's working on the
Stroh Brewery account and that he's up to
his ears in the stuff. He adds, "Its great!"
Olga Eldek has been transferred by the Eli
Lilly Company from Rome to Geneva. Saleh
A. EI-Ramahi has joined Saudi American
Bank in Alkhobar, Saudi Arabia. Catherine
Gordon is a grain merchandiser with
Continental Grain Co. in Memphis. R.
Charlton Griffin is an account executive
with The Glama Agency

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Thunderbird School of Global Management Archives, Arizona State University Libraries.

Full Text

THunDERBIRD
AMERICAN GRADUATE SCHOOL OF INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT
SPRING 1982
1 InterAd
A Different Twist to Teaching Advertising.
4 Alumni Award
John Warner takes Jonas Mayer Award.
5 Special Report
Barter Growmg in World Trade.
6 Campus News
Promotions, department news, spring enrollment and more.
8 Silver Reunion for Class of '56
Alums honored on return to campus.
9 ,Donde Estan?
Missing alums from '54.
10 Que Pasa?
Alumni gatherings across the country and throughout
the world.
12 Contacts
Resources Person! Alumni Association roster.
14 Focus on Latin America
ITT Key Issue Lecture Series addresses Economic Development.
16 Update
Classnotes on T-Birds around the world.
25 Graduation - December '81
Caps and gowns dress up the ceremonies and begin a
new tradition.
From the Editor
During the course of a year hun­dreds
of letters from alumni come
across my desk so that I may pluck
out the sad news of personal
tragedy or death and the happy
news of transfers, promotions or
new babies. It's one of the nicest
parts of my job.
One day last December a letter
from a recent graduate, addressed
to the alumni director, took that
routine journey to my desk, but re­mained
longer than usual. I read
it-and reread it-several times. I
think it says something special. I
reprint it here for you.
Sonia V. Thurmond
Editor
As a recent graduate of AGSIM,
and as the new director of Latin
America at LeRoifDresser, I was
especially touched by the tragic
death of one of our most distin­guished
alumni, Clifford Bevens.
I received the Thunderbird which
told of this untimely tragedy just
days before receiving the assign­ment
to make a sales visit to Guate­mala.
I had actually pushed hard to
convince management that a trip to
Guatemala was justified. Being
well-versed on Latin American
affairs, I realized that a trip to this
country brought with it special con­siderations
due to political and so­cial
upheaval. But being new to the
company I felt the need to prove
my worth and leave my training
days behind me. I write to you to
somehow capture on paper my
conceived obligations for making
THunDERBIRD
Spring 82 Volume 81, Number 3
Quarterly magazine of the Alumni
Office of the American Graduate School
of International Management, Glendale,
AZ 85306
Assistant Vice-President
Institutional Development
and Publisher:
Thomas R. Bria
Editor:
Sonia V. Thurmond
Special Correspondent:
AI Ilch
Staff:
Cathy Benoit, Naomi Cooper, Kraig N.
Johnson, Diane, Kelly, Donna Cleland
and Renee Drabier
Design:
Pat Kenny, Gray Day Graphics, Phoenix
Front Cover:
Student agency team from WB-557
reviews slides considered for moodset
portion of their presentation.
this trip. I became moved at the
thought of reviving what had been
abruptly silenced; and to demon­strate
that T-Birds could go on and
conduct international business
under any circumstances.
Carrying these thoughts with me,
I walked through the streets of
Guatemala City, conducting busi­ness
as usual-the way I know that
Clifford Bevens would like to see it
done ....
Having returned from a success­ful
trip, I felt that something had to
be rekindled, or recovered, and I
will carry with me the determina­tion
that could only be gained by
going forth, as any T-Bird would,
to succeed as Clifford Bevens had
throughout his career.
J.D. Allen
Class of '81
Photo lnJ Jon Whitaker
AGSIM's INTERAD:
Source of Talent for Advertising
According to the yellowin~ pii~es
of a 1958 catalog, tucked away in
the school archives, AD-200
(Advertising Theory & Practice)
was offered for the first time as an
elective in the department of
foreign trade at what was then
considered a struggling upstart of
an educational institution, The
American Institute for Foreign
Trade. Twenty-four years later,
by Sonia V. Thurmond
WB-557 ("INTERAD," Advanced
International Marketing and
Advertising Workshop) is still an
elective at American Graduate
School of International Manage­ment,
now an internationally­known
graduate school.
INTERAD, like AGSIM, has
evolved through the years into a
more sophisticated entity, but still
retains some of the "unusual."
Since 1976 the INTERAD program
has been under the direction of
Professor Paul Schlesinger, who
joined the school after retiring as
chairman of the board of Tatham­Laird
& Kudner Advertising in
Chicago.
Interviewed recently as to the
workings of INTERAD '82,
Schlesinger talked easily about
advertising and marketing courses
at AGSIM. He communicates his
devotion to his craft, not with
theatrics or the hard sell, but rather
with a sincere and calm approach.
His pride in the students, their
achievements and INTERAD is
evident.
Since taking over INTERAD,
Schlesinger has made some
changes in the structure of the
program as well as the logistics of
the actual presentations. He says
there are more applicants for the
class than the 28 openings available
each fall and spring semester.
Students are chosen through
interviews (which Schlesinger
conducts himself) and selection is
based on the applicant's academic
record, suitability for the course,
interest and desire. The selected
students split into four teams or
"agencies," choosing their own
positions within the team: account
executive, and heads of the areas of
The spring 77 winners-Kentucky Fried Chicken in Italy-posed with their "chicken"
after their win. Shown, left to right, back row: Gail Ray Houser, now in sales with IBM;
James F. Haag, Jr ., with N. W. Ayer & Son; David Kreckman, with Ashland Chemical
Co. Front row: Mark Scott, with Grey Advertising in Spain; Sarah Blodgett, with Exxon;
and Nimrod Kovacs, with Wells, Rich Greene, Inc.
2
market research, creativity, media,
merchandising and sales
promotion.
The team "agency" then obtains
a project from a multinational
company to develop a complete
marketing and advertising plan for
the introduction of a product into a
new foreign market. The companies
solicited by the students provide
the information, material and
financial assistance for the entire
project.
Schlesinger points out that this
corporate support is an important
change in the INTERAD program.
Previously, the team members had
relied on their individual personal
resources to finance the team
presentations. The cost was
becoming prohibitive and the lack
of equal funds made fair competi­tion
among the teams difficult.
The students begin work on all
aspects of the project and meet
regularly with Schlesinger and the
plans board, comprised of four or
five students who have done well
in previous INTERAD classes.
Throughout the semester the teams
build their plans and presentations
to be delivered before the panel of
top advertising and marketing
executives who serve as judges on
INTERAD DAY, near the end of
the semester.
The competition is fierce, accord­ing
to Schlesinger, and a glance at
the judges' evaluation sheets
dispels any idea that INTERAD is
merely a show. In addition to the
students' performances being
evaluated individually, all aspects
of the presentation are rated from
excellent to weak. Ratings on good
business sense, investment
advisability for the company and
overall objectives and strategies are
considered. Schlesinger points out
that in this type of competitive
situation, each team is essentially
an "ad agency account group" and
the panel of judges is the "client
company." When the client asks a
question, the account group had
better have the right answer. "It's a
real world experience and like the
real world, there is only one win­ner
- no second place," explained
Schlesinger. That winning team is
presented the Phoenix News­papers,
Inc. Award at graduation
exercises.
When asked if the structure of
THE THUNDERBIRD SPRING 1982
the INTERAD program at AGSIM
was unique to the educational
world, Schlesinger responded that
he knew of no other upper level
course structured exactly in the
same manner. Many schools use
the project approach to advertising
but the presentations and judging
panel composed of marketing and
advertiSing executives as done at
AGSIM are missing in those
programs.
Schlesinger feels that the judges'
INTERAD
HISTORY
The history of INTERAD (or
advertising presentations as they
were called prior to 1976) goes back
to 1958 when the AD-200 course
was taught by Richard Turner. Two
hours of credit were given for the
elective course and while presenta­tions
were performed, they were
given during a regular class
meeting.
Most of the credit for the present
day format of INTERAD goes to
Edwin Coleman, former executive
THE THUNDERBIRD SPRING 1982
participation is one of the most
important aspects of the program.
Top executives are invited to
campus twice each year (at their
own expense) to view the presenta­tions,
serve as judges and interview
students for employment. (This
aspect of the presentations was
conceived and organized by Ed
Coleman, who taught advertising
from 1962 to 1966. See box item on
page 3). Schlesinger explained that
agreement to recruit students is a
vice president of Upjohn Interna­tional.
Familiar with the School
from recruiting trips to campus,
Coleman offered his services to the
School soon after his retirement
from Upjohn. He began teaching
here in 1962. He conceived the idea
of inviting marketing and
advertising executives to the
campus to serve as judges for the
presentations, so they could view
the exemplary work done by the
students. The plan was a huge
success, bringing executives from
throughout the country to campus
twice each year - and - students
were getting jobs from the expo­sure.
Coleman's untimely death in
1966 cut short a productive career
and left the advertising classes
without an instructor.
Fresh from the advertising
business in New York, where he
had been a partner and owner of
Ehrlich, Neuwirth & Sobo adver­tising,
Norton Sobo took over the
advertising classes in the fall of
1966. Described by Schlesinger as
the "stem-winder" in the chronol­ogy
of advertising at AGSIM, Sobo
was inspired by a need to "return
something" to the advertising
profession that he held so dear. He
directed the program with a
passion, expanding on Coleman's
concept, until his sudden death in
the summer of 1972.
After Sobo's death, a part-time
instructor handled the program for
a semester until it was taken over
by Dan Kaufherr. Imprinting his
own style on the presentations,
they continued to grow and expand
under Kaufherr's direction until his
retirement from teaching in 1976.
At about the same time Paul
Schlesinger, chairman of the board
of Tatham-Laird & Kudner
prerequisite to receiving an
invitation to attend INTERAD and
serve as a judge.
Some of the firms that have been
represented on the judges panels
over the years include J. Walter
Thompson, Young and Rubicam,
Foote Cone and Belding, Ogilvy
and Mather, Doyle Dane &
Bernbach, Needham Harper and
Steers, McCann Erickson, Dentsu,
Publicidad Sibony, Leo Burnett,
Please turn to page 9
Advertising in Chicago, heard from
a friend in the American
Association of Advertising Agencies
about the teaching position at
AGSIM. This was at a time in his
life when he was not 100 percent
happy with what he was doing and
having made the decision "to
change his life," he visited the
campus to look over the territory.
Not impressed with the campus
itself, he nevertheless stayed a
couple of days and found he really
liked the students. He determined
he wanted the job, conducted his
own campaign to secure it and he's
been hard at it ever since.
Schlesinger began his advertising
career in 1947 as a sales-service
manager for Columbia Broadcasting
Company and later went with
Tatham-Laird & Kudner as a
media-research and account
supervisor. He moved in 1962 to
Needham Harper and Steers and
became senior account director and
senior vice president. In 1966 he
returned to Tatham-Laird & Kudner
until he joined AGSIM. Like his
predecessors, Schlesinger doesn't
rely solely on textbook material, but
shares with the students his wealth
of experience from his many years
in the advertising world. In addi­tion
to his teaching responsibilities,
which he finds far less hectic than
the advertising business,
Schlesinger performs consulting
work for companies and advertising
agencies in Chicago, New York and
Phoenix.
3
John Warner, left, receives the
Jonas Mayer Alumni Award from
Dr. Voris during the December '81
commencement exercises.
month-but we did develop our
language and business experiences.
I returned and joined Pepsi Interna­tional,
and here I am still with the
same company-32 years later-af­ter
living in seven different parts of
the world and residing abroad 27
years, travelling in 60 countries.
Alumni Award Goes to John Warner
Thirdly, I selected Mexico where
I have worked 20 of these years, at
first with Pepsi and then with the
Frito-Lay Products called Sabritas.
We started the latter in 1967 with
37 bicycles selling 600 thousand
dollars per year. We now have 4,000
trucks, 7,700 employees, a compre­hensive
farming program that
cooperates with Mexico's govern­ment
global food system, and we
sell every day almost double my
first year's sales. Mexico has been
good to me, and my family has en­joyed
the excitement of living in a
country as steeped in history and
folklore.
Jo~ A. Warner (,48), president,
Sabntas, a Pepsico organization in
Mexico, was presented the 1981
Jonas Mayer Alumni Award at the
December '81 graduation cere­monies.
The award is bestowed annually
on an alumnus who, in addition to
his personal achievement, has re­flecte~
distinction on his profession
and his country's position in
world business by his outstanding
performance in international ser­vice.
In accepting the award, John
noted the feeling of honor he was
experiencing by sharing the follow­ing
remarks with the graduates.
':In my fe~ minutes today, I would
like to outlIne for this outstanding
graduating class what this award
means to me:
First, that I made the right deci­sion
in leaving my paradise in cen­tral
Michigan and my civil en­gineering
position for a future in
international marketing and man­agement.
I had a three-year career
interruption in the infantry in
World vyar II and had developed a
world View of opportunities. I ar­rived
here and enrolled in Septem­ber
1948. It took me four years of
inter~ational endeavor to equal my
prevlOus annual earnings in
Michigan.
Secondly, I truly believed that
my career should be international-
4
not a headquarter based traveler.
So when I talked to Mr. Shurz, the
man who truly inspired this institu­tion,
and me-he said go abroad
young man. Don't hang round for
some miracle offer-get experience,
perfect your Spanish, and enjoy the
excitement of this great hemis­phere.
Then two of us took a freight
to South America-myself and Mr.
Jack Siebert (also from the class of
'48).
Several months later, we
obtained employment in Monte­video,
Uruguay for $60 per
Lastly, this institution attracts
very special students-not the doc­torllawyer
type who stays in his vil­lage
or city (with aligned support
from family and friends) or takes
over his father's business. We are
usually adventurers who are
searching for an exciting environ­ment
to exploit our strengths.
Usually we are innovative entrep­reneur
types with well-developed
egos to accomplish what we set out
to do. I hope all of you have the
satisfaction of a career like mine,
and of a moment like this, and reap
the true values of this institution."
W,arner proudly displays the Jonas Mayer plaque that accompanies the Alumni Award, as
friends look on.
THE THUNDERBIRD SPRING 1982
Barter Growing In World Trade
by Al Ilch
AMA Staff
Editor's note: American Graduate
School of International Management is
affiliated with the American Manage­ment
Associations. Al Ilch, of the
AMA Public Relations Office, is a reg­ular
contributor to "Thunderbird."
Barter, the oldest form of com­merce-
that many of us would
assume exists in only the most
primitive of cultures-is currently
undergoing a resurgence. Manyex­perts
predict that it will constitute
at least 20 percent of all internation­al
trade in the 1980's.
The rise in barter-like agree­ments,
commonly referred to as
countertrades, is not just limited to
exchanges between developing na­tions.
Many U.S. companies, such
as General Motors and PepsiCo,
have become involved. The size
and complexity of these deals have
grown to such an extent that a
number of firms have established
countertrade subsidiaries to handle
the transactions.
The concept of countertrade
appeared earlier in the 20th century
when some European nations re­sorted
to it in order to build up
their economies following World
War I. The New York Times reported
last October that economists attri­bute
countertrade's return to prom­inence
" . . . to rising oil prices,
which have lifted the debt of
nonoil-producing third world coun­tries
to $400 billion and thrown bal­ance
of payments far out of
whack."
There are many countertrade
variations currently being used.
One is a straight swap and doesn't
involve the exchange of currency.
Usually just two parties are in­volved
and each must have some­thing
the other wants. A second
form is switch trading, which in­cludes
a third party or switch trad-
THE THUNDERBIRD SPRING 1982
er and is based upon the use of
credits, which can't be directly con­verted
into cash but do represent
purchasing power of products
manufactured in the country of one
of the participating parties. The
credits are then sold at a discount
to a switch trader who, in turn,
must find someone who can pur­chase
something with the credits.
A third form of countertrade is
known as counterpurchase or
"offset" agreements. This occurs
when one company, in order to
complete a sale, agrees to buy
"non-resultant" products (goods
not related to its normal business)
from the second party in order to
offset the cost of the transaction to
the second party.
One of the more popular types of
countertrade is the compensation or
"buy-back" deal. A typical buy­back
arrangement might involve a
Western firm building a plant in a
foreign country and then being
compensated with goods produced
at the plant.
Countertrade offers several
advantages for emerging and lesser
Barter-Countertrade
developed nations. It can reduce
trade imbalances and the outflow of
currency, while it generates the
currency needed for industrial de­velopment.
On the other hand,
U.S. companies, traditionally pre­ferring
to deal on a cash basis,
often cite disadvantages. The quality
of the products offered by emerg­ing
and less developed countries is
sometimes inferior, and the burden
of long term obligations, some
lasting ten years or more, are not
uncommon. American business
people also find that they often
must deal with red tape, especially
in Communist countries. U.S.
firms, however, are finding that
countertrade is becoming a necessi­ty
if they wish to continue to com­pete
in the world trade market. As
former Secretary of Agricul ture
Robert Bergland told The New York
Times last October, fl •• • when a
company decides it wants to en­gage
in countertrade, it opens its
doors to the three-quarters of the
world's population that cannot
afford to deal in hard currency."
May 17-18, 1982 AMA Headquarters, New York City
Meeting #10331F-IO
Price:
INDIVIDUAL
FEES
REGISTRATION CARD
AMAMEMBERS
$545
NON-MEMBERS
$615
REGISTRAR AMAllntemationaJ, 135 West 50th St., New York, N.Y. 10020
Tel: (212) 246-0800
YES, I want to attend ___________ date __________ _
Ust team registrants on separate sheet o Thisconfinns phone registration. Full fee is payable in advance. 0 I am entitled to AMA Member
fee 0 Please send membership information 0 Bill me
Name: ___________________________ ___
Admess: ___________________________ __
Mark Reynolds, assistant vice president, A.I.C., New York, center, who lectured at the
International Insurance and Risk Management Winterim conference, talks with a student
while program director, Duane Hall, right, looks on.
A student shakes hands with Dr. Robert C. Kramer, agribusiness program director at the
W.K. Kellogg Foundation, who delivered the banquet address at the conclusion of the
Agribusiness Winterim Conference. (Photos by Kraig N. Johnson)
6
Winterim
Enrollment for Winterim was 441
with 166 of that number being en­tering
students. In addition to the
introduction of an international
business ethics program, four "con­ferences"
were offered: Agribusi­ness,
directed by Dr. Robert Foster;
International Banking, under direc­tion
of Dr. Taeho Kim; Internation­al
Insurance and Risk Management,
directed by Professor Duane Hall,
and Comparative Industrial Rela­tions,
Dr. Jack Barbock, visiting
professor from the University of
Wisconsin, directing.
International Business
Ethics Added to Win­terim
A course on international busi­ness
ethics, directed by Dr. Robert
Moran of the International Studies
Department was included in the
Winterim course offerings. The
program was developed by Dr.
Marshall Geer, vice president for
academic affairs and Dr. Moran.
Grant support for the program
came from the Levi Strauss Foun­dation
and Chevron U.S.A.
Readings, case studies and
simulation games were used in the
course, which was designed to
make students aware of corporate
policies of selected U.S. multina­tional
corporations vis-a-vis the
Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
Ethical dilemmas faced by interna­tional
business people in selected
countries were also reviewed as
well as government regulations and
implications on the ethical business
issues of working and conducting
business in other countries.
Water and Gas Lines
In - Electrical Lines
Being Installed
Wasco, Inc., Phoenix, Arizona,
was awarded the contract to install
the underground primary electrical
system on campus and trenching
began in mid-January and should
be completed in three to four
months. The new lines will replace
the major electrical trunk system on
campus and reduce electrical
meters from eight to one.
THE THUNDERBIRD SPRING 1982
Charles Mannel Tom Bria
Promotions
President Voris recently an­nounced
three promotions in the
administration.
Charles Mannel, former director
of Career Services, was named vice
president for corporate relations.
Mannel jOined AGSIM in 1976 after
13 years with the University of
Minnesota, where he had served
on the business faculty, as assistant
dean, programs and administration
and director of student, staff and
alumni services.
Dr. Thomas Bria, former director
of alumni relations, was promoted
to assistant vice president for insti­tutional
development. He will be
responsible for the offices of alumni
relations, communications and de­velopment
services. Bria joined the
School in 1980 after serving as
assistant alumni director at Arizona
State University for three years.
Ms. Carol Hazelett was promoted
to director of Career Services. She
has been associated with the School
since 1969, and was named assis­tant
director of career services in
1976. She was head of domestic
travel services of the Arizona Auto­mobile
Association, before coming
to AGSIM.
Spring Enrollment
The total enrollment for the
spring semester stands at 1083 with
433 first semester students; 245
second semester, 300 third semester
and 105 fourth semester. Prelimi­nary
figures indicate approximately
25 percent foreign students and
nearly 34 percent women students.
THE THUNDERBIRD SPRING 1982
Carol Hazelett
Academic Departments
Modem Language
Dr. Mary Ann Critz attended the
AATSP Conference in Seattle in
early fall to present her paper at
the "Lusu-Brazilian Literature ses­sion.
Professors Christa Britt, Helmut
Roessler and Lilith Shutte, of the
German section, attended the fall
WAGS Conference also in Seattle.
Dr. Robert M. Ramsey, chairman,
Modern Languages Department,
served as a visiting professor at the
Beijing Institute for Foreign Trade
in December 81IJanuary 82. He also
visited IIST in Japan to survey their
English as a second language
program.
World Business
Dr. Clifton Cox, named acting
chairman of the World Business
Department when Professor Bossert
resigned, has been appointed
permanent chairman for a term
ending September '83.
Professor Frank Tuzzolino, in
conjunction with T.G. Griffith, pre-pared
an article, "International
Banking in the 1980' s: A Global and
Regional Perspective," which
appeared in the August/September
issue of Arizona Business.
During his recent visit to London
School of Economics to deliver a
paper, Dr. Taeho Kim discussed
issues in theory of international
banking with Professor James E.
Meade, a Nobel laureate, of Cam­bridge
University who is renowned
in international economics.
International Studies
Dr. Beverly Springer contributed
a chapter to a recently published
anthology, European Women on the
Left, Slaughter & Kern, editors. Dr.
Springer's chapter covered the acti­vities
of Anna Kuliscioff, a noted
Italian feminist, who participated in
the emergence of European social­ism
and feminism in the late 19th
and early 20th centuries.
Organizational Changes
The campus computer center has
been placed under the supervision
of Business Affairs and the mana­ger
of the center will report to Lee
Stickland, vice president for busi­ness
affairs, according to a directive
from President Voris. He also
appointed a computer advisory
committee comprised of Drs. Bria
(assistant vice president for institu­tional
development), Conklin (pres­ident
of the Faculty Senate), Geer
(vice president for academic affairs)
and Ramsey (chairman of Modern
Language Department). The Presi­dent
of ASLC (student government
organization) and one additional
student also serve on the commit­tee,
which will recommend policy
to the computer center manager
and the vice president for business
affairs. more news on page 24
Registration lines were long and frustrations were many as 1083 students arranged for
spring classes. Kraig N. Johnson
7
After 25 years-12 members of the Class of '56 gather for a group photograph. Left to
right, back row: Webb Todd, Michael Newton, Wayne Parkinson, Daniel Boller, John
Stewart, Richard Land, Charles St. Clair, Robert Cottam, Fernando Pulido. Front row:
Senorita de Noronha, Irving Perlman, Marion Phelan Land, Jo Siegle.
'56 Alums Return to Celebrate
Silver Anniversary Reunion
There was talk of old times,
friendships reestablished, memories
shared and visits with former profs.
"Yes, the old campus has changed
some" - "Larry Finney is still the
same, but the towel is bigger" -
"the Senorita - ever charming" -
"and Martha S 1yder remembers
EVERBODY'S name."
The informal reception in the
Goldwater Lounge on Thursday
evening prior to Friday's gradua­tion
provided the alums and faculty
and staff an opportunity to get
together and remember times past.
It also gave the Silver Reunion hon­orees
a chance to catch up on news
of the growth and development of
AGSIM.
On Friday the group met in the
alumni office, visited the placement
office, the library and academic
affairs office, and were treated to a
8
campus tour before attending the
pre-commencement luncheon with
the board of trustees at President
Voris' residence.
Several last minute cancellations
cut attendance to a dozen, with
honors for the longest trip going to
Irving Perlman who came from
Accord, Massachusetts.
At the graduation ceremonies the
alums were presented their Silver
Graduation Certificates.
This is the second year the alum­ni
office has organized the Silver
Reunion for the class celebrating
the 25th year after graduation, and
it appears to be on its way to be­coming
a tradition for AGSIM. The
class of '57 will be honored this De­cember.
All you '57 Thunderbirds
out there - be sure and make a
note on your calendars now. Grad­uation
is scheduled for Friday, De­cember
17 and we hope you'll all
plan now to attend. The alumni
office will be sending the first
notices some time in the early fall.
Watch for them. Let's make the '57
Silver Reunion the biggest yet.
The photographer caught Jo Siegle obviously
enjoying a story from someone in the
group.
It's been a long time-;-Michael Newton,
left, and Richard Land, right, meet at the
Silver Reunion reception.
THE THUNDERBIRD SPRlNG 1982
INTERAO/Continued from page 3
and Grey Advertising to name a
few. The list is lengthy and
includes numerous other ad-alley
names. T-Birds are employed
throughout these agencies. Benton
and Bowles has been represented
on the judging panel for more than
10 years, and also claims the
highest number of T -Birds in their
employ. Another agency that has
close ties with AGSIM is Young &
Rubicam Inc. "Mr. Advertising"
himself, Ray Rubicam, was a
member of the School's board of
trustees until his death in 1978.
Y & R also provides a full tuition
and stipend scholarship for an
AGSIM student each year.
Many consumer product com­panies
also participate in INTERAD
judging, such as Vicks Chemical
Company, Colgate Palmolive and
the Clorox Company.
Schering-Plough International
supported the '81 program with a
generous donation.
The winning INTERAD team of
spring '78, presented their entire
campaign before the full member­ship
of the American Association of
Advertising Agencies at its
national meeting, held in Scottsdale
at the Camelback Inn. This
exposure for AGSIM and its
students was arranged by
Schlesinger, who served as national
director at large and chairman of
the government relations committee
of the Four A's.
Interest in the INTERAD
program has grown to the point
that tickets for admittance must be
obtained well in advance of each
semester's presentation. Standing­room-
only crowds plus the local
fire marshall's insistance on open
aisles prompted the use of this type
of attendance control.
Schlesinger sees the future of
advertising in computers and
electronics and as for the future of
INTERAD, he predicts the pre­sentations
will continue to be one
of the important interesting events
on campus. They will continue to.
improve in scope and sophistication
and make contributions to
consumer marketing and the
advertiSing profession. And as long
as Paul Schlesinger has anything to
do with INTERAD, you can bet on
those predictions!
THE THUNDERBIRD SPRING 1982
Class of '54
We need your help! If you know the where­abouts
of these alumni, please fill out the form
below and mail to: The Alumni Office, Amer­ican
Graduate School of International Manage­ment,
Glendale, Arizona 85306.
By providing our office with this information,
you assist us in keeping track of the successes
of our graduates. A list of unknown alumni will
appear consecutively by graduation year in up­coming
issues of "Thunderbird." We're eager to
receive news about you, your family or your T­Bird
friends for our Update section, so please
include that information also.
Muchas Gracias!
Almquist, Frank A.
Banning, William D.
Barrett, Roy A.
Belding, George A.
Bibelheimer, Reuben, R.
Biggs, Donald W.
Blanchard, Frank E.
Blood, Eugene H.
Bondurant, Herbert L.
Brice, Roland D.
Butterworth, William Y.
Chalson, Paul
Christy, Donald
Clark, Robert E.
Clarke, Philip F.
Clarke, Richard R.
Crane, Ted R.
Davidson, Roger M.
Devine, John A.
Dykstra, Andrew H.
Ellis, Roger
Engstrom, Gene B.
Erchick, William A.
Espinoza, Athur
Fennimore, John R.
Fischer, Merton H.
Fisk, Albert W.
Gianakouros, Kimon
Gillett, Thomas P.
Goretasas, James G.
Goss, Geoffrey H.
Greedy, Warren K.
Hallock, Joe L.
Hedenberg, Charles R.
Hendricks, Herbert W.
Hewitt, Frank L.
Higgins, Hubert L.
Jabin, Ernest R.
Kerr, Norman S.
Kiernan, John M.
Kouras, Kim
Kubicek, Joseph L.
Law, Gerald D.
Lindfors, Ralph V.
MacDonald, Robert H.
Maier, Norman
Mangino, Paul A.
Marienthal, Louis B.
Miller, Dabney D
Modiano, Joseph
Moore, Robert D.
Moss, Eugene
Nash, Frederick H.
Nicholl, John M.
Nover, Alvin F.
O'Neal, Ronald L.
Petrequin, Harry J.
Pfeifer, Edmund T.
Pierce, Albert K.
Proulx, Dounne B.
Rayman, William E.
Rogers, John A.
Schag, John P.
Schuman, Barton L.
Soltz, Sally Ann
Stamper, Richard R.
Strouse, Herman L.
Urias, Brigido V.
Valladares, Carl E.
Vath, Robert F.
Walden, Walter C.
Whistler, Donn
Wiltbank, Leo G.
Zambianco, Julian P.
Name and Mailing address _______________ _
Business affiliation ____________________ _
Title ______________________ _
Business phone ________ Home phone _______ _
9
Washington, D. C. . . . Brian Marshall
reports that the November gathering had
about 35 people from AGSIM and several
other schools in attendance for the
reception and the presentation by Mr.
William Edgar, director, Bureau of
Economic & Business Affairs, U.S. State
Department. He presented an excellent (if
somewhat pessimistic) assessment of
prospects for international trade in the
coming years, according to Brian.
Thunderbird Club of New England
The November meeting at Foreign
Affairs pulled 21 alums, who then ad­journed
to Tatsukichi-Boston for din­ner,
organized by Danielle Dufour and
Suzanne Remar. Eric Bjerke gave an in­formative
overview of political and eco­nomic
trends in Japan. Special awards
were presented to Steve Hall and John
Wicker for their longstanding financial
backing of the chapter.
Alumni director Tom Bria and vice
president for external affairs, Robert
Hom attended the December Harvard
Club meeting.
At the February meeting Karen McCor­mick,
with the First National Bank of
Boston, gave a presentation on banking
in the Middle East.
Club president Jay Donovan advises
that the TCNE has come a long way in
the past two years, giving credit to an
"extremely active core of eight to ten
people" who are great to work with
and who wish to continue their contact
with the school and its alumni. More
specifically, during the past few
months, the Club has worked with 10
to 15 prospective students and has pro­vided
a network of T-Birds for recent
graduates and alumni transfers from
other parts of the country and world.
Future events calls for a dinner at
Michael's Waterfront on April 6 with a
presentation by Sandy Jenkins of First
National Bank of Boston.
Dallas-Fort Worth ... The November
15th outing at UniverSity Park (near
S.M.U.) produced 20-25 enthusiastic T­Birds
who kept plugged into the Cow­boy-
Lions game.
10
Singapore ... The 5th Annual Singapore Christmas Party was held at Mary Cuf­fe
('68) and Bo Walker's ('68) house on December 16. There were 64 in attend­ance-
making the biggest party yet.
The Singapore group has moved their monthly meetings to The Pavilion Res­taurant
and Dolphin Bar, 275 Orchard Road, telephone 737-4155. Meetings are
still held the last Wednesday of every month at 5:30 p.m. All visiting T-Birds wel­come!
Florida ... Enjoying a get together at
Marco Island this past summer were
left to right Elen and Tom Granger
('65), Earl Oman ('67) and Bob and
Loretta Capwell ('70). Missing from
photo were Bill Dunnuck ('65) and Dale
Fidel ('61). Anyone interested in join­ing
us next summer, please contact:
Earl K. Oman, 750 San Esteban, Carol
Gables, Florida 33146.
Stephen Hall ('69) of Dedham, Ma.,
left, congratulates Babson College Pres­ident
William R. Dill at his inaugura­tion,
October 2, 1981. Stephen repre­sented
Dr. Voris and AGSIM at the
ceremony.
THE THUNDERBIRD SPRING 1982
T-Bird Double Wedding in Germany ... Pictured left to right for a dual wed­ding
ceremony in Munich this past November are: newlyweds Axel Mees ('76,
with BMW) and the former Georgia Barron ('77, consultant with McKinsey &
Company); guest Peter Jucht (,76, with American Hospital Supply Corporation in
Paris) and newlyweds Sonia Victoria and Victor Alfaro (,76, Economics Counselor
at the Mexican Embassy in Brussels).
Tulsa ... Seated: Udo Sietins and Bill Brown. Left to right, standing: Jeff Daw­son,
Ralph Glascione, Jim Burton, Jr., John Martens, Lee Johnson, Rose Ann
Sietins, Jim Crawford, Brian Gawer and Steve Wallace.
THE THUNDERBIRD SPRING 1982
Saudi Arabia ... Ghassan Majdalani
('75) does find time during his travels
in Saudi Arabia and Egypt to relax and
enjoy time with friends at their Oasis
retreat outside Riyadh.
Greece ... Randy Ramler, Gary Fallou
('79), Eric Parssinen and Tim Watkins
(both '78) get together in Greece. They
all work for Service and Supply Inter­nationai,
owned by Howard Crooks
('49).
Chicago ... Area T-Birds have
organized a regular monthly meeting at
Cafe Bohemia, 138 S. Clinton (corner of
Clinton and Adams) in Chicago. The
group will meet the first Friday of every
month, beginning at 5:30 p.m. All
Chicago area T-Birds and those alums
visiting the area are invited. Ample
free parking is located next door.
Bahrain ... There was a T-Bird Christ­mas
party at the home of David Carpi­ta
and they've found 13 T-Birds on the
island. The group continues to meet
each two-three months.
Tulsa, Oklahoma ... Tulsa T-Birds be­gan
a series of meetings in the early
fall as a result of the combined efforts
of Brian Gauler ('69) and Udo Sietins
('70). According to Brian, Oklahoma
has over 60 T-Bird alums listed, split
between Tulsa in the eastern part and
Oklahoma City in the west. Of approx­imately
30 alums in the Tulsa area,
more than half have become active in
getting together on a fairly regular
basis.
San Francisco ... The San Francisco
Bay Area Thunderbird Alumni Associa­tion
elected officers at their Christmas
gathering in December. They are: presi­dent,
John Austin; vice president, Tom
Williams; treasurer, Anne Hayden and
secretary, Katie Bonar. Serving on the
board of directors are: Hal Coggins,
Dick Fredrickson, Bruce Eberly and
Claire Larson. Regional contacts are:
San Francisco-North Bay, Hal Cog­gins;
East Bay, Claire Larson and South
Bay, John Lambert.
Berger Erickson, executive vice
president, attended the Bay Area
Christmas party on December 5 at
Bardelli's Restaurant.
The Bay Area T-Birds meet every
first Tuesday of the month at 5:30 p.m.
in Embarcadero Center No.1 at Bar­naby'S.
11
If you are visiting, job-hunting or moving to
their area, the T-Birds marked RP (resource
person) will help you. If you'd like informa­tion
about alumni meetings and activities in
their area, the T-Birds marked AA (alumni
association) will advise you of times and
places of get-togethers.
ARIZONA
Morris A Barkan (RP. AA)
PO. Box 40693
Tucson, AZ 85717
(602) 325-0468 (0)
Noble Blackshear (AA)
1892 W Sage
Tucson, AZ 85704
(602) 297-7678 (H)
(602) 252-7231 (0 )
Edward J Dombroski (RP)
8105 Via de Villa
Scottsdale, AZ 85258
(602) 991 -6769 (H)
Rolla B Holland (RP, AA)
PO. Box 1307
Phoenix, AZ 85001
(602) 266-6758 (0)
CALIFORNIA
Daniel W Bohart (RP)
14244 Gaelyn Ct
Poway, CA 92064
(714) 748-9486 (0)
Unda Carlson Haun (RP)
137 Arcadia Ct
Pacifica, CA 94044
David 0 Chapman (RP)
1740 Plaza Del Norte
Balboa, CA 92661
(714) 675-4905 (H)
(213) 518-2350 (0)
Paul R Collins (RP, AA)
160 Lower Via Casitas
Greenbrae, CA 94904
(415) 461 -6883 (H)
(415) 981 -8316 (0)
James R Corley (RP)
8373 Rosewood Ave. #202
Los Angeles, CA 90048
(213) 655-6204 (H)
(213) 856-6099 (0)
James M Dale (RP, AA)
clo Villa Nova
3131 W PaCific Coast Hwy
Newport Beach, CA 92660
(714) 641 -1838 (H)
(714) 642-7880 (0)
Mary F Doan (RP)
1207 Lorain Rd
San Manno, CA 91180
(213) 273-7860 (0 )
Bruce J Eberly (AA)
448 StudiO Circle #3
San Mateo, CA 94401
(415) 344-9417 (H)
Paul E Elias (RP)
3866 Sacramento
San Francisco, CA 94118
(415) 751-4216 (H)
(415) 546-7001 (0)
Yu Fukui (RP)
2501 Redondo Beach #234
Gardena, CA 90249
Roland E Garcia (RP, AA)
24 S. Thorne Avenue
Fresno, CA 93706
(209) 442-8100 (H)
John Michael Haun (RP)
137 Arcadia CI.
Pacifica, CA 94044
(415) 994-0470 (H)
(415) 362-7440 (0)
Alain JP Labat (RP)
1730 Halford Ave. # 144
Santa Clara, CA 95051
(408) 985-7039 (H)
John B Lambert (RP)
804 Nash Rd
Los Altos, CA 94022
(415) 941 -4667 (H)
(408) 925-6238 (0)
Gary G Miller (RP)
390 Islay Street
San Luis Obispo, CA 93401
(805) 544-4484 (H)
George C Mussenden (RP, AA)
2325 Longden Ave
San Marino, CA 91108
(213) 289-8304 (H)
(213) 289-6895 (0)
AntOniO T Savarese (RP)
9676 Carroll Cyn Rd #B2
San Diego, CA 92126
(714) 487-4140 (0)
Ronald A Thomson (RP)
8105 Buena Fortuna
Carpinteria, CA 93013
(805) 684-4624 (H)
(805) 644-7461 (0)
Gary L. Towell (RP)
17512 Ermanlta
Torrance, CA 90504
Louise C. Ure (RP)
120 Green St
San Francisco, CA 94111
William T Walsh (RP)
3548 D,v,sadero
San Francisco, CA 94123
(415) 874-1963 (0)
COLORADO
S. Robert August (RP)
12266 E. Bates Circle
Aurora, CO 80014
(303) 751 -0428 (H)
(303) 469-3377 (0)
John 0 Cullinan (AA)
2030 E. 11th #401
Denver, CO 80206
(303) 377-1810 (H)
(303) 530-2300 (0)
Linton 0 Kingsbury (RP)
2557 E Woodmen Rd
Colorado Springs. CO 80918
(303) 598-5434 (H)
(405) 528-2378 (0)
Timothy C Walker (RP)
P.O Box 54
Colorado City, CO 81019
(303) 676-4191 (H)
(303) 676-3353 (0)
CONNECTICUT
George A Wehmann (RP, AA)
28 Plymouth Rd
Stamford, CT 06906
(203) 324-0428 (H)
(203) 323-7896 (0)
Henricus M A. Winnubst (RP)
33 Swanson Drive
Milford, CT 06460
(203) 874-4300 (H)
(203) 358-5435 (0)
DISTRICT OF
COLUMBIA
K.A. "Casey" Cummings
ENI Companies
1000 Wilson Blvd , Suite 2402
Arlington, VA 22209
(703) 528-8780 (0)
(703) 998-0865 (H)
FLORIDA
Mark W Faller (RP)
433 Worthington Dr F2
Winter Park, FL 32789
(305) 629-1444 (H)
Randy F. Graves (RP)
11610W 39th SI. #2
Coral SPrings, FL 33065
(305) 753-6540 (H)
(305) 771 -0764 (0)
George E. Grimmett (RP)
2660 W State Rd 434-Sulte #5
Longwood, FL 32750
(305) 862-3518 (H)
(305) 830-5135 (0)
James B. Rudd (RP)
14114 Arbor Hills Road
Tampa, FL 33624
(813) 962-3207 (H)
(813) 223-7777 (0)
Sally Rudd (RP)
14114 Arbor Hills Road
Tampa, FL 33624
(813) 962-3207 (H)
(813) 223-7777 (0)
AntoniO R Vidal (AA)
10521 SW 99th St
Miami, FL 33176
(305) 667-7140 (0)
C. Greg Wadas (RP, AA)
1110 Uncoln Ct
Cape Coral, FL 33904
(813) 542-3818 (H)
GEORGIA
R. Edward Foy (RP)
clo Carpets Inti Georgia Inc
P.O Box 1503
Orchard Hill Rd
La Grange, GA 30241
Martha E Goodyear (RP)
322 E Harris St
Savannah, GA 31401
Annalee Hixson (RP)
1055 Piedmont Rd #B-1
Atlanta, GA 30309
(404) 874-0128 (H)
Arthur M. Lucas (RP, AA)
2572 Hyde Manor Dr., N W
Atlanta, GA 30327
Rodney A Taylor (RP, AA)
655 Ramsdale Dr
Roswell, GA 30305
(404) 992-3216 (H)
(404) 393-9900 (0)
HAWAII
Harold Fanning (RP)
44-208 Malae Place
Kaneohe, HI 96744
(808) 254-1221 (H)
(808) 235-4591 (0)
Tom E.lJune B. Pearson Sweetser (RP)
894 Kaahue Street # 10
Honolulu, HI 96825
(808) 396-8486 (H)
ILLINOIS
Michael Edward Biller (RP)
30 E. Huron #3004
Chicago, IL 60611
(312) 944-5494 (H)
(312) 346-5900 (0)
Eric Alexander Denniston (RP)
5914 Meadow Dr
Lisle. IL 60532
(312) 969-2992 (H)
(312) 656-8600 (0)
Robert E Johnson (RP)
PO Box 813
Arlington Heights, IL 60006
(312) 358-6464 (H)
Judy S Purze (RP)
88 W Schiller #809
Chicago, IL 60610
(312) 266-1084 (H)
(312) 875-0256 (0)
Anita Marie Sur Claricoates (RP)
707 Circle Drive
Roselle, IL 60172
(312) 732-4000 (0)
Jesse G. Wilson (RP)
4432 N. Richmond
Chicago, IL 60625
(312) 463-7835 (H)
INDIANA
J. Wright Witcher (RP)
9144 Bryant Ln. #IA
Indianapolis, IN 46250
(317) 842-9147 (H)
(317) 261-6271 (0)
KANSAS
George L. Hiller (RP)
7712 Tomahawk Rd.
Prairie Village, KS 66208
(913) 648-6099 (H)
(816) 234-2603 (0)
KENTUCKY
Edgar T Busch (RP)
Western Kentucky UniverSity
Management Department
Bowling Green, KY 42101
(502) 842-9138 (H)
(502) 745-5408 (0)
LOUISIANA
Robert W Hesson (RP)
219-21 Olivier St
New Orleans, LA 70114
MASSACHUSETTS
C. Michael BenniS (RP)
111 Suffolk Rd
Chestnut Hill, MA 02167
(617) 232-9116 (H)
Jay J. Donovan (RP)
12 Jones Ave
Wilmington, MA 01887
(617) 658-6594 (H)
MARYLAND
Randolph W Boyer (RP. AA)
1221 PrOVidence Rd.
Towson, MD 21204
(301) 321 -7985 (H)
(301) 244-4267 (0)
MICHIGAN
Stephen C. Engel (RP, AA)
6361 Eagle Ridge Dr
Kalamazoo, MI 49004
(616) 385-8976 (H)
(616) 385-6746 (0)
DaVid C. Votruba (RP)
2792 Windsor
Troy, MI 48098
(313) 689-2302 (H)
(313) 225-3518 (0)
MINNESOTA
Mary K. McMunn (AA)
1671 Juliet Ave.
SI. Paul, MN 55105
(612) 699-1164 (H)
(612) 726-2047 (0)
MISSOURI
Robert R. Nelson (RP)
7 Gateswood Dr
SI. Peters, MO 63376
(314) 278-2820 (H)
(314) 652-7600 (0)
NEBRASKA
H. Mike Harvey (RP)
3222 Center SI.
Omaha, NE 88105
(402) 342-2620 (H)
(402) 342-4083 (0)
William S Morns (RP, AA)
4825 So. 91 st Ave
Omaha, NE 88127
(402) 339-4920 (H)
(402) 341 -0500 (0)
NEW JERSEY
Belmont Haydel (RP, AA)
423 Larenceville Rd #802
Laurenceville, NJ 08848
(609) 698-5000 (0)
William O. Neumann (RP)
60 Ramsey Rd
Middlesex, NJ 08846
(201) 722-0330 (H)
(201) 722-0330 (0)
Sherman J. Olson (RP)
37 Dodle Dr
Parsippany, NJ 07054
(201) 267-1598 (H)
(212) 964-4990 (0)
NEW YORK
Robert M. Ballinger (RP)
1 Parnil Drive RFD #2
Gansevoort, NY 12831
(518) 587-7723 (H)
(518) 783-2380 (0)
Gregory BuchaJ (RP)
27 Cobbe Circle, N.E
Jamestown, NY 14701
(716) 664-3180 (H)
(716) 664-6513 (0)
Thomas P. Carlin (RP)
314 E. 80th SI. #IB
New York, NY 10028
(212) 775-3134 (0)
John C. Cook (RP)
clo Merrill Lynch
One Liberty Plaza
165 Broadway, 49th Floor
New York, NY 10006
(212) 637-8661 (0)
Michael D. Crotty (RP)
201 E. 87th St., Box 106
New York, NY 10028
Kathleen M. Kidder (RP)
84-15 63rd Ave
Middle Village, NY 11379
(212) 476-0203 (H)
(212) 520-7495 (0)
Peter J. Martin (RP)
111 HicksSI. #15A
Brooklyn, NY 11201
(212) 922-2248 (H)
Frances E. McCutchon (RP)
220 E. 79th #3A
New York, NY 10021
(212) 879-7362 (H)
(212) 758-9700 (0)
LUIS I. MeJia-Maya (RP)
clo Fordham Unlv
P.O. Station 37
Box 439
Bronx, NY 10458
(212) 365-8151 (H)
(212) 933-2233 (0)
Paula Messer (RP)
34 Black Mallard Circle
Fairport, NY 14450
(716) 425-2308 (H)
J Richard Saint-Amant (AA)
144-49 Charter Rd. # 110
Jamaica, NY 11435
(212) 380-3565 (H)
(212) 269-7230 (0)
R. Wayne Walvoord (RP)
2550 Baird Rd
Penfield, NY 14526
(716) 223-7492 (H)
(716) 385-1151 (0)
OHIO
Roy A. Daugherty (RP)
clo General Electric Co.
Aircraft Engine Group
Mail Drop C-15
Cincinnati, OH 45215
(513) 243-5443 (0)
Thomas G Hackim (RP, AA)
2356 Torrey Hill #3
Toledo, OH 43606
(419) 474-3414 (H)
(419) 247-0176 (0)
OREGON
James P. Pillon (RP)
18462 Sw. Castle Ct.
Beaverton. OR 97007
(503) 649-4920 (H)
(208) 643-8139 (0)
Gay M. Schellentrager (RP)
7115 N Delaware
Portland, OR 97217
(503) 285-8517 (H)
PENNSYLVANIA
Ahmed M Hussein (RP)
103 Concord PI
Harleysville, PA 19438
(215) 362-8307 (H)
(215) 822-4300 (0)
Bruce;Marsha Crumley (RP)
207 Woods Rd
GlenSide. PA 19038
(215) 886-7638 (H)
(215) 299-6629 (0)
Donald W Stanek (RP)
2862 Washington St
PalmerTWP
Easton, PA 18042
(215) 252-7394 (H)
THE THUNDERBIRD SPRING 1982
Robert J. Schneck Randolph K. Miller (RP) Joseph T. Miller (RP) ECUADOR ITALY
c/o INA Corporalion 4100 Greenbrier Dr. #312 Box 25029 Glenn E. Mallory (RP) Evangelos C. Hassiotis (RP)
25 Tower Houston, TX 77098 Awali, Bahrain c/o Artlel Cia Ltda c/o Citibank NA
1600 Arch Street (713) 523-6914 H) 754960 (H) V M Rendon 120 Y Panama Foro Buonaparte 16
Philadelphia, PA 19101 (713) 236-4216 (0) 755483 (0) 3 PibO 20121 Milan, Italy
David B. Terrar David B. Trott (RP, AA) Arlette E. Ramsey Miller (RP) Guayaquil, Ecuador 028542226 (0)
c/o Westinghouse Nuclear Inl'l. 6811 Mimosa Ln. P.O. Box 25029 04387552 (H) Niels J. Lindeskov (RP)
5 Parkway Center Dallas, TX 75230 Awali, Bahrain 04304355 (0) Via Della Scala 42
Pittsburgh, PA 15220 (214) 691-5857 (H) 754960 (H) EGYPT 50123 Firenze, Italy
PUERTO RICO
(214) 386-2388 (0) 754451 (0)
George T. DeBakey (RP) (055) 284000 (H)
William B. Beaty (RP)
John D. Willyard (RP, AA) BERMUDA c/o Rockwell International Gianni Torti (RP)
8131 Wycomb Dr. c/o Blue Bell IntI. Robert J. Rosser (RP) 15 Radwan EI Tabib, 11th Floor Via Amedeo D'Aosta 8 Houston, TX 77070 Giza, Cairo, Egypt 95 Wall Street Guanijibo Industrial Zone Seldon Rose
Mayaguez, PR 00708
(713) 890-2163 (H) Pitts Boy Rd. 989358 (0) Milano, Italy
(713) 227-0987 (0) Pembroke, Bermuda 022716304 (H)
Ole B. Dam (RP) UTAH (809) 295-3050 (H) ENGLAND 026293307 (0)
c/o Digital Equipment Corp. (809) 295-2482 (0) Robert C. Hackett (RP)
P.O. Box 106 Thomas G. Goudie (RP) c/o SKF IVORY COAST
San German, PR 00753 5154 Ridgecrest Dr. BRAZIL Mundells Kenneth Erickson
(809) 833-5019 (H) Salt Lake City, UT 84118 Mark S. Abrams (RP, AA) Welwyn Garden City African Development Bank
(809) 892-1946 (0) (801) 967-9036 (H) c/o First National Bank of Boston Hertfordshire, England Room 802
Jerome Firsty (RP)
(801) 486-7241 (0) Rua Libera Bardo 487 25111 (0) B.P. 1387
P.O. Box 14423 VIRGINIA Sao Paulo, Brazil Ashok D. Patel (RP) Abidjan, Ivory Coast Santurce, PR 00916 32-07-11 ext. 518 (0) K.A. "Casey" Cummings (RP) 2599629 (H) c/o Continental Can Inti.
(809) 726-3491 (0) 3608 Oruid Ln. 378101265 (0) Coburg House Sheet Street JAPAN
Robert/Gloria Shuman (AA) Annandale, VA 22003 Roberto Bumagny (RP, AA) Windsor Terence M. Esmay (RP)
c/o Robert A. Shuman & Assoc. (703) 573-0961 (H) Caixa Postal 30618 Berkshire, England Meitsu-Daily
Box 1393 (703) 528-8780 (0) 01144 Sao Paulo, Brazil Roby S. Swan (RP) 1-1 Nishi-Shimbashi
Hato Rey, PR 00919 WASHINGTON Anthony B. Da Silva (RP) #9 Midholm Nimato-Ku
Nicole Stevens (RP) c/o FMC Divisao De Guine ESC Wembley Pk Tokyo 105, Japan
c/o Leo Burnett Co.
Charles S. Hazen (RP, AA) AvPaulista 1274 Middlesex HA9 9LJ, England John K, Pidcock (RP)
Park Blvd. Condominium #901
17810 184th, N.E. 9 Andar 904-7801 (H) c/o Ava IntI. Suite 502 Woodinville, WA 98072
San Juan, PR 00911 (206) 788-3295 (H) 01310 Sao Paulo Brazil FRANCE Higashi Azabu Sky Heights
John F. Tomlinson (RP, AA)
2832722 (0)
Alfred C. Hamburg (RP) 3-5-1 Higashi Azabu, Minato-Ku
c/o Caribbean Properties Ltd. WISCONSIN Stanford P. Wilson (RP, AA) 67 Avenue Gambetta Tokyo, Japan
171 Del Parque Thomas J. Metcalf (RP) Av. Graca Arvantta 57 Courbevoie 92400, France B. Michael Powell (AA)
San Juan, PR 00911 1046 Williamson Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Peter J. Jucht (RP) c/o American Home Assurance Co.
(809) 725-9544 (H) Madison, WI 53703 274-0166 (H)
11 Bis Avenue Poniatowski Kioicho Tbr Bldg. 10
(809) 725-7365 (0) Richard A. Storch (RP) BRUNEI Maison-Lafitte 78600, France 5-7 Kojimachi
RHODE ISLAND 7419 Whitacre Rd.
Bruno J. Cornelio (RP) 39625915 (H)
Chiyoda-Ku, Tokyo 102, Japan
Madison, WI 53717 9522370 (H)
Donald A. Dinuccio (RP) (608) 833-2552 (H) c/o Bank of America 30328512 (0) (03) 234-2171 (0)
35 Latham Farm Rd. (608) 836-1011 (0) Suri Building Jerome J. Petin (RP) Takaaki Tanaka (RP) Smithfield, RI 02917 Jalan Tutong c/o Revlon
(401) 232-1264 (H) Todd N. Thurwachter (RP) Bandar Seri Begawan, Brunei 21 Rue Bossiere 3-16-10-408 Shiroganedai
(401) 781-6500 (0) c/o S.C. Johnson Mail Station #37 Paris 75116, France Minato-Ku
1525 Howe st. CANADA Tokyo 108, Japan
SOUTH CAROLINA Racine, WI 53408 Gilles J. Rancourt (RP) GUATEMALA JORDAN Virginia A. Thompson (RP) WEST VIRGINIA c/o Champion Road Machinery Ltd. Juan F. Forster (RP) Mohammad Anwar Abdelrahman (RP) 900 Gracern Rd, #227 POBox 340 c/o Izabahn Exports
Columbia, SC 29210 Edwin N. Vinson (RP) Goderich P.O. Box 770 c/o Jordan Kuwait Bank
(803) 765-4342 (0) P.O Box 53 Ontario NYA 4C8, Canada Guatemala City, Guatemala Head Office
Huntington, WV 25706 (519) 524-7870 (H) PO. Box 9776
TENNESSEE (304) 525-2166 (H) (519) 524-2601 (0) GREECE Amman, Jordan
William M, Ferry (RP) (304) 522-2742 (0)
Mark C. Rousseau (RP) Denis Gavanas (RP) KENYA 5932 Sedberry Rd, A-706 702 3rd Ave SW c/o Sanavag Associates Group Gertrude S. Muloli Kopiyo (RP) Nashville, TN 37205 P.O. Box 1622
(615) 352-4019 (H)
Calgary
Syntagma Square c/o TWlga Chemicals
Alberta, Canada P.O. Box 30172 (615) 383-0801 (0) (403) 265-3588 (H) Athens 126, Greece Nairobi, Kenya
John D. Walker (RP) ARGENTINA Jack D. Taylor HONG KONG 559777 (0)
5010 Ashley Dr. Robert B. Garrison (RP) 2045 Lakeshore Blvd West Bill Tak-Ming Ling (RP, AA) Mustafa MamuJee (RP, AA) Nashville, TN 37211 Las Heras 1056 Martinez Suite 3904 c/o CCAA Inn Ltd. c/o MamuJee Bros Ltd. (615) 834-4619 (H) Buenos Aires 1640, Argentina Toronto, Ontano M8V 2Z6, Canada 10th Floor P,O. Box 90600 (615) 741-5870 (0) 7927545 (H) Ka Wah Bank Building Mombasa, Kenya
TEXAS 7433611 (0) CHILE 259-265 Des Voeux Road C
Carlos P. Seidel (RP) Max Krauss-Droguett (RP) Hong Kong KOREA D. Bruce Blankenship (RP)
Box 5246 San Martin 140-Piso 18 c/o Triumph IntI. 5242320 (H) Jung-Bae Kim (RP)
Lubbock, TX 79417 Buenos Aires 1400, Argenlina Avda Santa Maria 1926 5453047 (0) 190-76 Sadang-Dong
(806) 793-0742 (H) 343862 (H) Santiago, Chile Dongjak-Ku
(806) 762-5221 (0) 344276 (0) 744544 (0) INDIA Seoul, Korea
Yadlam G. Dwarkanath (RP, AA) 590-6442 (H)
Houston W. Briggs (RP) AUSTRALIA COLOMBIA Sri Krishna Spg & Wvg Mills 28-7607 (0)
3519 Bremen Steven 0 Clarke (RP) Gabriel E. Cuellar (RP) Subramanyapura Jae Sk Lee (RP, AA) Dallas, TX 75206 c/o Inti. Harvester Co c/o Graco Inc Bangalore-560061 , I nd ia
211 Sturt St. Apartado Aereo 90877 41517 (H) c/o Korea Development Bank
David L. Brothers (RP)
S. Melbourne Bogota 8, Colombia 41595 (0) I.P.O. Box 4570
1105 Wayne Drive
Victoria 3205, Australia 236-9855 (H) Seoul, Korea
Round Rock, TX 78664 Behram R. Sethna (RP) 7769745 (H)
(512) 255-1608 (H) 8591640 (H) Greg W Grinnell (RP) Karai Estate 77165 (0)
r
Debora Sue Burks (RP)
6977532 (0) c/o Security Pacific Natl. Bank 2nd Floor
AUSTRIA Apartado Aero 92434 248 T aredo Rd. MEXICO 4530 Briar Hollow PI. #203 Bogota 1, Colombia Bombay 400-007, India Craig J. Dudley (AA) Houston, TX 77027 Thomas J. Brennan (RP) Rio Rhin #77 Penthouse (713) '629-5490 (H) c/o AM Soybean Assoc. COSTA RICA Shankar Sundaram (RP) Mexico 5 DF, Mexico (713) 960-5182 (0) Gatterburggasse 18/213 James Dahlstrom (RP, AA) Mahalakshmi #25 Kasturi
Elizabeth B. Buzard Burdette (RP) A-1190 Vienna, Austria c/o Super Servicio Ranga 1 Yengar Rd. Claude Shaneyfelt (RP)
28 E. Whitewillow Circle 317219 (H) Apartado 992 Madras 600018, India Explanada # 1220-A
The Woodlands, TX 77381 374118 (0) San Jose, Costa Rica 71062 (H) Lomas de Chapultepec
812408 (0) Mexico City 10 OF, Mexico
Michael M. Byram (RP) Paul A. Tveit (RP) William F. Goode (RP, AA)
333 Melrose Dr. #34C c/o AM Embassy Apartado 1266 INDONESIA MOROCCO
Richardson, TX 75080 16 Boltzmanngasse San Jose, Costa Rica Daniel J. Goldsmith (RP) Judith K Taybi Cole (RP)
(214) 934-0880 (0) Vienna, Austria 352947 (0) c/o Scott & Danmark Ltd. 52 Rue Patrice Lumumba
James Roy Easter (RP)
426127 (H)
James C. Stanley (RP, AA) P.O. Box 410/KBY Appt 13
5310 Lost Forest Dr. # 182
315511 (0)
Apartado 5181 Jakarta Selatan, Indonesia Rabat, Morocco
Houston, TX 77092 BAHAMAS San Jose, Costa Rica 512792 (H) THE NETHERLANDS (713) 681-4399 (H) Suzanne J. Black (RP) 563538 (0)
(713) 225-7600 (0) c/o Allied Bank DOMINICAN REPUBLIC ISRAEL
Alexander L. Barge (RP, AA)
Ethan G. Book (RP) Weissenbruchstraat 253 2596 GH
George A. Giagtzis (RP, AA) P.O. Box 3944 Simon Hakim (RP) Den Haag, The Netherlands
Nassau NP, Bahamas c/o Bank of America NT&SA
3100 Jeanetta #906 P.O. Box 1373 P.o. Box 1348 070-280083 (H)
Houston, TX 77063 (809) 322-8992 (0)
Santo Domingo, Dom Rep Ramat Hasharson, Israel 010149777 (0)
(713) 974-4239 (H) BAHRAIN 5671375 (H) 0348454 7 (H) (713) 651-0641 (0) NIGERIA
John House 6896121 (0) Adrienne Wayne (RP)
Bernard J.w H. Miedema (RP, AA) Kuwait Asia Bank Palace Hotel (MSA, OVDA) Caroline S. Ufaeyen (RP)
8327 W. Tidwell #1404 Iko! Abia P.O. Box 20501 277 Hayarkon Ikam PA Houston, TX 77040 Manama, Bahrain Tel Aviv, Israel
(713) 939-1169 (H) Cross River State, Nigeria 13
(713) 449-2000 (0)
Continued on page 15
ITT Lecture Series
Focuses on Latin Atnerica
The International Telephone and
Telegraph Corporation, which has
sponsored Key Issue Lecture Series
at colleges and universities
throughout the country since 1973,
selected AGSIM as the site for one
of its 1981-82 programs.
The theme of the series at Amer­ican
Graduate School of Interna­tional
Management is "Latin
American Economic Development:
A Progress Report."
The program, comprised of seven
lectures presented by experts on
Latin America, covers economic,
political and social topics. The
series is being directed by Professor
Joaquin Duarte, Chairman of the
International Studies Department.
In discussing the rationale for
focusing on Latin America, Duarte
noted that no geographic region in
the developing world offers better
opportunities for trade and invest­ment
with the U.S., Europe and
Japan than does Latin America. He
called Latin America a "third world
pacesetter" in such initiatives as
OPEC, the Group of 77, UNCTAD,
regional integration, regional de­velopment
banks, economic models
and even political models.
The opening lecture was pre­sented
by Baltazar Ponguta, chief
economist, VITRO, Monterrey,
N.L., Mexico, who discussed The
Evolving Mexican Economy on
November 5, in the Valley Bank
Center concourse in downtown
Phoenix.
Calling oil wealth the key to
Mexico's growth, Ponguta pointed
out that the peso will increase in
value and the country's manufac­tured
goods will not be able to
compete in export markets if Mex­ico
exports too much oil. Converse­ly,
exporting too little oil will pro­duce
a trade deficit.
He also listed several of what he
called structural problems in Mex­ico
that need attention. Included
14
Baltazar Ponguta, chief economist, VITRO,
Monterrey, N.L. , Mexico, kicked off the
ITT Key Issues Lecture Series in November
with a lecture on the Evolving Mexican
Economy.
Dr. Bernardo Grossling makes a point
during his lecture on Energy and Natural
Resources in Latin America.
were high unemployment, under­e.
mployment, a too-rapid popula­tion
growth, the concentration of
resources jobs and wealth in the
cities of Mexico City, Monterrey
and Guadalajara, poverty, and
migration to the U.S. and from ru­ral
to urban areas. Also included on
the list were inadequate roads, rail­roads,
and port facilities along with
deficiencies in hospitals and
schools. Ponguta said that these
structural problems will take a great
deal of capital, organization and
time to solve.
In discussing Mexico's oil, Pon­guta
pointed out that the country
has proven oil reserves of 72 billion
barrels, probable reserves of 58 bil­lion
barrels and potential reserves
of 250 billion barrels. With this, set
against a stable and flexible political
system, Mexico can only improve
its situation.
He stated: "In terms of opportu­nities,
Mexico is perhaps the hot­test
prospect for trade and invest­ment
in the Third World, particu­larly
with respect to the U.S."
Touching on international rela­tions,
Ponguta noted that Mexico,
as the first Latin American country
to undergo a genuine social revolu­tion,
has a considerably more posi­tive
attitude toward revolution than
the U.S. He added that Mexico has
developed a tried and true method
for dealing with the left, both
domestic and foreign, based on the
assumption "that exclusion, ostra­cism
and hostility accomplish no­thing-
while the establishment of
ties of friendship, interest and the
like produces mutual understand­ing
and cooperation."
The second speaker in the ITT
lecture series was Dr. Bernardo
Grossling, natural resources advisor
to the Inter-American Bank. A
noted geophysicist and expert on
world energy, Dr. Grossling lec­tured
as a private scientist and dis­cussed
Energy and Natural Re­sources
in Latin America. Speaking
in the auditorium on campus on
January 21, Grossling stated that
the amount of undiscovered oil in
the world may be two to three
times larger than is commonly per­ceived.
He noted that the eventual
depletion of the earth's petroleum
resources would occur within a few
decades at worst, and in not more
than a century at best, if a reason-
THE THUNDERBIRD SPRING 1982
able rate of economic growth con­tinues
(three percent per year or
so). He sees solutions to the world
energy crisis as hydro-electricity,
biomass, solar energy and fusion,
the still unbridled form of nuclear
energy. He pointed out, however,
that to reach this new energy
plateau, the next 30 to 50 years will
be crucial. "Most societies are left
only with the petroleum option to
fill the energy gap in the required
time," he said, "and this oil bridge
is crucial."
Likening the world energy crisis
to a war scenario, Grossling noted
that certain unknown factors can
suddenly and drastically turn the
entire machinery on a different
course-but not necessarily a nega­tive
course. He thinks it is conceiv­able
that a breakthrough in fusion
could occur, allowing large quanti­ties
of energy at a very low cost to
become available, or that possibly
five to ten more exceptionally large
petroleum accumulations may be
found, upsetting the energy scena­rio
for two or three decades. It may
also be that the conversion of solar
energy to electricity may provide
Contacts Continued from page 13 PORTUGAL Diane Huth (RP)
Casa Amarela
NORWAY Rua das Nogueiras
Christian Falck-Pedersen (RP) 2750 Torre
Nobelsgt 1 Cascals, Portugal
Oslo 11, Norway 289410 (H)
2124633 (0) 964471 (0)
Jan A Strangel (RP) Marvin R Huth (RP)
Aasterudvn 1 6A Casa Amarela
N-1344 Haslum, Norway Rua das Noguelras
(02)532526 (H) 2750 Torre
(02)254250 (0) Cascais. Portugal
289410 (H)
PAKISTAN 964471 (0)
Ashfaq A. Ouettawala (RP AA) c/o Bankers EqUity lid SAUDI ARABIA
Dr Z,auddln Ahmed Rd Gary E Adams (RP)
State life Bldg. #3 UCAIA & A
Karachi. Pakistan Bldg 07-043
cheaper electricity than hydroelec­tricity,
or that perhaps even an en­tirely
new source of energy may be
discovered.
With regard to Latin America and
the energy problem, Grossling
noted that while some Latin Amer­ican
countries have suffered heavy
balance of payments problems be­cause
of their dependence on pe­troleum
imports, others are self­sufficient
or have a surplus of pe­troleum
to export. He contends that
Mexico will con tinue to merge as
probably the most outstanding pe­troleum
country in the world, and
the heavy crude oil of the Orinoco
Belt in Venezuela appears to be an
economically viable resource.
Because of its geography and
climatic conditions, Latin America
is well endowed with hydroelectric
resources-in fact some of the
largest hydroelectric projects in the
world exist there, and several coun­tries
make wide use of this source
of power.
Apparent as it is that Mexico,
Venezuela and Trinidad have re­maining
petroleum resources that
have an impact on world markets,
Grossling estimates that soon there
will also be important petroleum
discoveries in other countries­Argentina,
Colombia, Peru and
Bolivia for instance.
In summa tion, Dr. Grossling
said, "that in solving the world
energy crisis what is at stake is not
the failure of certain efforts here
and there, but the stability of mod­ern
civilization."
Lecturers and their topics in the
series include: Dr. Steven Klees,
College of Education, Florida State
University, discussing Communica­tions
in Latin America; Senator
Leonardo Montiel Ortega, oil and
economic development expert in
the Venezuelan Senate, lecturing
on Venezuela Today; Dr. Albert
Fishlow, director, Councilium on
International and Area Studies,
Yale University, who will talk about
Financing Economic Development
in Latin America; Dr. Luiz Felipe
Palrneira Lampreia, minister,
Embassy of Brazil, lecturing on
Brazilian Economic Progress; and
Dr. Torn La Belle, associate dean of
student and academic affairs, Uni-
Continued on page 24
Roger N Voegele (RP) Barton L Hartzell (RP) James P Rooney (RP)
clo Hazar Est Calle Marbella 62 c/o JP Rooney & Assoc
PO. Box 41699 Apto lB P.O Box 11 ·1238
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia Madrid 34 Spain Bangkok. Thailand
014789719 (0) Elizabeth J Nelson (RP, AA) 234-3031 (H)
SINGAPORE c/o Chase Manhattan Bank NA 251 -2323 (0)
Michael M Brooks (RP) Apartado 972 TUNISIA
clo Insurance Co. of N America
Paseo De La Castillana 31 Scott K Johnson (RP)
SE ASia Regional Office Madrid 1, Spain Apt 10 Immeubleu Rehne 2
14th H Clifford Centre SUDAN Cite MahraJane
Singapore 0104, Singapore Michael Phelps (RP, AA) Tunis, Tunisia
7340818 (h) clo U N IHlgh Comm. for Refugees TURKEY 436111 (0) POBox 2560
James W Echle (RP. AA) Khartoum. Sudan
Murat A. liter (RP)
23 G Venus Mansion 81243/81250 (0) Farabl Sokak No. 3/5
Peck Hay Rd
Cankaya
Singapore 0922. Singapore SWEDEN Ankara, Turkey
2356204 (H) Claus T. Morch (RP) VENEZUELA
2540819 (0) Ekeby Skogsv 15 Mitchell K McMurry (RP)
clo Royal Commission For Jublal 18265 DJursholm. Sweden Richard l. Hasenpflug (AA) 087531345 (H)
clo Bank of Montreal
PANAMA Jubial, Saudi Arabia 10 Sunset Crescent 087531620 (0)
Apartado Postal 68415
Michael C. Pierce (RP) 3417428 (H) Clementi Park Altamina 1062
PSC Box 2946 3416532 (0) Singapore 2159. Singapore SWITZERLAND Caracas, Venezuela
APO Miami, FL 34002 Edward C. Auble (RP) 4686907 (H) Bernhard G F Edgar (RP AA) 324275 (0)
PARAGUAY Allco, Saudi Arabia 914068 (0) Oberhasll 3 Suzy A Sagy Kulcsar (RP)
Perry E. Ball (RP)
Fluor Arabia lid. Bldg James W. Stewart (RP) St Niklausen Apartado 51228
P.O. Box 474 Al0 NO. 7 Orange Grove Rd. 6005 Lucerne. SWitzerland Caracas 105A, Venezuela
clo American Embassy AI -Kobar, Saudi Arabia Singapore 1025, Singapore (041) 442466 (0) 745169 (H)
Avda McaL Lopez 1776
John R Svalander (RP. AA) 2394442 (0)
AsunCion. Paraguay Eugene H. Castle (RP. AA) William A Wagner (RP)
201 ·041 /49 (0) clo U S Army Project Office clo Wabco Trade Co c/o BP Chemicals (Suisse) SA WEST GERMANY
John P Zavala (RP) PO Box 5305 Room 516 · 5th FI Orchard Tower PO. Box 291 Gunter H Kohlke (RP)
Riyadh. Saudi Arabia 400 Orchard Road CH-1211 Geneva, Switzerland
Calle Caballero 184 Singapore 0923. Singapore (022) 467747 (0) An der E,skaut 46
AsunCion. Paraguay Michael F Chahine 6390 USlngenfTS
49164 (0) clo Saudi American Bank 2353410 (H) TAIWAN West Germany
po. Box 180 2543678 (0)
lillian l. Tung (RP) 0608114245 (H)
PERU Dhahrain Airport SOUTH AFRICA 45th Floor 32 018141373 (0)
Mahlon Atkinson Barash Dhahrain, Saudi Arabia Thomas J. Smolenski (RP) Alley 3 Lane 929 Andrew R Kreinik (RP)
Avenida Espana 386 Harry A. Cockrell (RP) 173 West St Min Sheng East Road Hamburger Str 2-4
lima, Peru PO. Box 34 Sandown Taipei. Taiwan 5000 Keeln 1, West Germany
226-324 (H) Riyadh, Saudi Arabia Sandton 219, South Africa THAILAND (0221) 13·17 53
286-200 ex 430. 437 (0)
Phillip J. Gibson (RP) 7834349 (H) Axel Mees (RP)
415700 (0) Thermchai Phinyawatana (RP) PHILIPPINES clo Alexander & Alexander clo Ylpintsoi Finance lid Ungererstr 19/24
Mary Baron (RP) PO. Box 2041 SPAIN 475 Sri Ayudhya Rd 8000 Munich 40. West Germany
c/o Inti School P.O Box 323 Riyadh, Saudi Arabia Harold D Brown (RP) Phayathal
Commercial Ctr. Makati clo Sterwln Espanola SA Bangkok 4. Thailand
Metro Manila 3117, Philippines Av Del Gen. Peron 27-4 24534012 (0)
Madrid, Spain
THE THUNDERBIRD SPRING 1982 15
CLASS OF '47
Robert Anderson visited campus in Novem­ber-
the first time since graduation. He is
president of Langan Haeger, Vincent &
Born, Inc., in Wheaton, II. William E.
Bierer is with the office of the auditor
general, State of Arizona, in Phoenix.
Robert L. McIntire retired from Sears in
April '81 and is now living in Philadelphia.
William L. Schaeffer has joined Litton
International Development Corp. as
integrated logistics support manager on a
Saudi Arabia project for the company. Stan
Scharf, who is retired, writes that he had
lunch with Jolly Backer in London in
September. It was their first meeting since
1947! Jolly is vice president, Phillips
Petroleum.
CLASS OF '48 and '49
John D. Henson ('48) has been elected a
director of the International Center of
Florida. He was also elected a vice president
of the Florida Exporters and Importers
Association. Richard (Dick) Paltenghi ('48)
is secretary-treasurer of H.C. Macaulay
Foundry Co. in Berkeley, Ca. Thomas
Sherwin ('48) recently retired from Procter
& Gamble and he and his wife, Lillian,
reside in Mason, Oh. Robert Charles Ellis
('49) is vice president, Citibank International
in Houston. He heads up the investment
management group's international services
office. He travels to Mexico, the office's
principal clientele area, about six times each
year. Mary and Dwight Steffen ('49) are
enjoying retirement in North Carolina after
eight happy years in Haiti.
CLASS OF '50 and '51
Alton L. Ashley ('50) is in Minneapolis with
Engler & Budd Co., investment securities.
S.J. Buccheri (,SO), director of sales, Facet
Enterprises, Inc., Stamford, Ct., sent us an
extended update. "After spending three
years in a training program with the
international division of the Bendix
Corporation, I spent the next 19 years
working up the executive ladder. During
this period I lived in Brazil ... and Europe,
... traveling throughout the Middle East
and Africa as regional manager for Bendix
InternationaL" In 1976 Bendix was required
to divest themselves of seven automotive
component divisions, which were formed
into a new company, Facet Enterprises. He
was offered the job to establish Facet's
international sales and marketing
operations. He travels abroad extensively
for periods of five to seven weeks, but says
the work is fascinating and he never regrets
making the decision to go into this field and
16
enroll at (AIFT) AGSIM. Walter Miller
(,51), who has his own real estate
investment company, Sagamore Realty, in
Scottsdale, visited the alumni office in late
October. George Strohecker, ('51) president
of Rodeway Inn-Grand in Phoenix, paid a
visit to campus in the fall. Richard Sullivan
(,51), with Mobil Exploration Norway, Inc.
in Stavanger, Norway, sent a Norwegian
troll for the Balloon Race Auction with the
following invitation: "It is rare indeed for
anyone from AGSIM to visit Stavanger, in
spite of its importance as the oil capital of
Norway. The invitation is always open,
however. Hope someone will drop by to
say hello."
CLASS OF '52 and '53
Peter R. Cozzetto ('52) is in Minneapolis
and is president of Cesco International, Inc.
Vaneda Hupman ('52) is in Findlay, Oh.
and is head nurse at Blanchard Valley
Hospital. She writes that she and husband,
John, hope to retire in a year or so and
move south to warmer weather. Louis
Pellegrini ('52) has moved from Connecticut
to Bradenton, FI. He sends best wishes to
all. Fred Koppl ('52) writes from Munich to
advise that he is now an independent
international consultant. William Schollard,
Jr. ('53) is executive vice president of Allied
Bank International in New York. The bank
was incorrectly identified in the winter
Thunderbird. Charles T. Wood is vice
president-Europe for S.T.P. Corporation in
Ft. Lauderdale, Fl. He joined the company
in April and is enjoying the challenge of the
new position and the move to Florida.
CLASS OF '54 and '55
George Lindahl, Jr. ('54) writes from
Guatemala City where he is happily
completing his 19th year of residence. He is
manager of CIA Algodonera de America,
and adds, " ... was married April 9,
1981-very, very happy." Rob Risher ('55)
is assistant to the director of the
International Holistic Center, Inc., a
Phoenix-based worldwide health
networking organization.
CLASS OF '56
Eugene L. Box is an account executive with
Bateman, Eichler, Hill, Richards in Santa
Rosa, Ca. He says, "I hope to visit T-Bird
during 1982. Until then, I send all my
friendship and best wishes for good health
and good fortune." Jack Butefish is
president of GDI (Group Dynamics, Inc.) in
Santa Monica, Ca. Narce Caliva writes:
"Sorry I won't be able to make it to sunny
and warm Arizona in December for our
Silver Reunion. Instead, I will be here in
cold, snowy West Germany ... but
thinking of you. Upon graduation I joined
Ebasco International Corp. in New York,
later switched to International
Graphoanalysis Society in Missouri, and in
1959 joined the American Red Cross staff.
During the past 22 years I've had numerous
Red Cross assignments, including overseas
tours at Seville, Spain; Friedberg, Germany;
Saigon; Camp 2ama, Japan, and this second
time in Germany, at Stuttgart, where I'm in
charge of A.R.c. in Europe and the Middle
East. I hope life has treated each of you at
least equally as well. I will look forward to
hearing about you and our reunion."
Norman Capps is in Kansas City, Mo. and
is president of E.C.P.I., a firm in the
computer education field. Diane Connelly
has her own real estate investment
company in Phoenix. Robert G. Connelly is
self-employed as a management consultant
and lives in Billings, Mt. Robert M. Cottam
is living in Fair Oaks, Ca. and is retired.
H.P. (Dan) Daniels is with Eli Lilly & Co.
in Indianapolis in corporate new product
planning. Carroll E. Dolan is in Boston.
Lost from our files since 1964, Carroll's
reply card indicates he has received his
C. L. U. Robert M. Duin is in Houston with
Chase Bank International as second vice
president, manager, private banking. Mrs.
William (Sammy Dunn) Armstrong sends
best wishes to all from Lubbock, Tx. Lyle
V. Fredrickson is associated with Anthony
M. Guzzardo, landscape architects and land
planners in San Francisco. Shiela M.
Hansen, spouse of the late Herb Hansen
writes: " ... there are so many memories
associated with Thunderbird. Our son,
Clark, was born at the school." Shiela is still
using her Spanish and says, "have a
wonderful gathering and drink a toast for
me to Thunderbird." Walter G. Hodges is
chairman, English, humanities, journalism
and philosophy department, Mesa
Community College, Mesa, Az. Mimi
Kennedy resigned from her job with the
phone company in Tennessee so as to have
more time for travel and golf. Harry
Kratoville is export manager for Labelon
Corporation in Canandaigna, N. Y. Herman
Kuznicki is president of Creative Power
Corp., a company that specializes in oil
drilling, and in using new techniques to
rework and rebuild old, abandoned oil
wells. He is based in Hamburg, N.Y.
Addison L. Luce, Jr. is in London with the
Bank of Montreal as vice president. William
Merriam, Jr. is president of INTRUSCO
Corp., the insurance subSidiary of the
International Trust Co. of Liberia, an
international banking company. He has
been in Monrovia for three years. Harold
Miller is owner and president of Gulf States
Beauty Supply Co., Inc. in Birmingham, AI.
He writes: " ... sorry we cannot be with
you for the reunion-it is our busy time of
year. Best regards to all." Earl M. Morgan
is managing director, international, for Ag
Chemical Group, FMC Corp., in
Philadelphia. Karl E. Ringer is in San
Francisco where he is vice president and
general manager of Towers, Perrin, Forster
and Crosby, a reinsurance company.
Thomas Rogers sent best wishes to his
classmates of '56 and to faculty friends. He
is in Hong Kong as director, China/Hong
THE THUNDERBIRD SPRING 1982
W.L.(Larry) Schaeffer '47 Robert C. Ellis '49
t
r
Charles T. Wood '53 Eugene Box '56
Earl Morgan '56 W.M. " Bill" Anderson '57
Norman Blanchard '59 Gerald H. Kangas '60
Christo! J. Scheiffele '62 E. Wesley DuChemin '62
I. I THE THUNDERBIRD SPRING 1982
L
Kong for all of Monsanto Company's .
business. Since leaving campus he and wife
Maplette have been in Argentina, Brazil,
Canada and the U.S. During a spring
semester sabbatical, Robert M.
Smetherman, a professor of history at
California State University-Fresno, is
working on a project dealing with U.S.
involvement (both capital and technical
assistance) in the development of the
Mexican oil industry. Warren StelzmilIer is
senior auditor with Pacific Missile Test
Center at Point Muger, Ca. He sent best
wishes to all who attended the Silver
Reunion. W.R. Tiernay is area vice
president for Philip Morris International in
Miami. Clark Warren sent best wishes for
the reunion. He is in San Juan and is senior
vice president and regional director for the
Dominican Republic, Mexico, Puerto Rico
and Venezuela for Young and Rubicam
International. W.A. (Winn) Wyman is
general manager, marine tran~portation for
Gulf Trading and Transportation Co. m
Houston. Ladimir Joseph Zvanovec sent a
letter from R.I. to his classmates: "Wish I
could join you, but, no way . .. . the
Spanish Larry (Finney) and Frank Gackle)
pounded in stood me in good stead and I'm
still using it for both business and pleasure.
Paul's (Wilson) input was plenty useful too.
Matter of fact, that year at T-Bird was a real
turning point. My Navy career was heavi~y
influenced by it, and I carne out a speCialist
in Latin American politico-military strategic
planning. Now that I've retired, I'm in the
foreign lnilitary sales field, applY!ng both.
the Navy experience and the T-Blrd trammg
in equal measure. Best wishes to all ...
Bob, Glo, are you there? How about you,
Burr, Lou .. . maybe a moment of silence
to remember Read and Doc Schurz."
CLASS OF '57
William (Bill) Anderson has been named
president and CEO of Ca!ladian ~anoir
Industries, Ltd., a Canadian holdmg
company with business interests in several
locations in the U.s. , Mexico and Italy. He
and his wife, Claudia, public relations
director of Humber Memorial Hospital,
reside in Toronto. Bill adds: "We have been
working out of the U.S. for 15 of the 25
years since graduation. Another five were
spent in domestic international
assignments. We've enjoyed all of it and
credit Thunderbird with helping to start us
on this life path." Richard Cummings and
spouse, Dorothy, visited campus in October
from Walnut Creek, Ca., where Richard is
president of Burr-Cummings & Associates,
Inc. Donald F. Schroeder represented
AGSIM at the inauguration of President
Christophersen of Colorado State
University. Don is president of Frontier
Tractor and Equipment, Inc. in Fort Collins.
Also in Fort Collins is Gerald P. Thomas, a
teacher of English as a foreign language at
Colorado State University.
CLASS OF '58
Lloyd N. Darden is located in Santa Ana,
Ca., where he has his own marketing firm .
Spouse, Dotty, is manager of Cardillo
Travel in San Juan Capistrano. Ham
Dethero is senior vice president of Crocker
Bank in San Francisco. Alvin G. Fritzner is
in Jardines del PedregaI, Mexico. Walter
Kellogg has joined National Can Corp. and
is in Naperville, II.
CLASS OF '59
G. David Akerberg is in Knoxville, Tn.,
where he has his own business, David
Akerberg Skincare Center. He writes, " .
have been back in the U.S. since 1973.
Spent 20 years living in Germany, Spain,
Mexico, Hong Kong . .. was very
successful. . everyone treated me well .
very happy, but there is only one place to
live in the world-the good old U.S.A."
Norman Blanchard has been appointed
president of SmithKline Animal Health
Products. He joined the company in 1972 as
area director for Europe and the United
Kingdom, and was named vice president,
international operations in 1976. John R.
Burdick is a population officer with A.I.D.
in Dar-es-Salaam, Tanzania . George L.
Reeves is president, Chase Bank, S.A. in
Buenos Aires. Jack Van Bergen writes from
La Paz, Bolivia, where he is vice president
and manager for Bank of America: "My
family and I have enjoyed our assignment
in Bolivia for the last two years .. . a very
challenging banking experience."
CLASS OF '60 and '61
Donald I. Brenteson ('60) is in Tempe, Az. ,
where he owns Brenteson's Wholesale
Christmas Tree Flock and Accessories Co.
Gerald H. Kangas ('60) was recently
honored by his undergraduate school,
Willamette University, Salem, Or. He was
presented an alumni citation, one of five
awards presented annually to alumni of
Willamette judged to be particularly
outstanding in their professional and
personal lives. Gerry is director, Bahrain
Bankers Training Center and continues to
be active in the AGSIM alumni group there.
He is consistent in directing prospective
students to campus. John B. Carter (,60), is
senior vice president and executive creative
director at Ogilvy and Mather, Inc. in Los
Angeles. Gene Lee Bennett ('60) is senior
vice president, National Bank of North
America, in New York. Kenneth L. Bennett
(,61), who is general sales manager for
W.D. Warren Co. in West Germany, visited
campus in December for the first time ~ince
graduating. He was accompanied by hiS
wife, Ursula, daughter, Karin, and son,
Christopher.
CLASS OF '62 and '63
Alan Blank ('62) a lost alum for some years,
phoned to tell us he is in Eugene, Or. , and
is self-employed as a nature photographer.
He also announced that the Blanks are
expecting their first child in March.
Theodore F. Ryan ('62) writes from the
D.C. area, where he is vice president,
marketing, government services division,
Electronic Data Systems: " .. . returned to
the U.s. in January after three years in
Singapore directing EDS' Asian operations.
After 10 months of commuting to Mexico
weekly, I took over responsibility for all
EDS marketing to the federal government."
Christof J. Scheiffele (' 62) is country
director for CARE-Cameroon. He had
been stationed in Bangladesh. The
assignment in Cameroon is his eighth
posting with CARE since he graduated. He
17
adds that the program there is mostly the
development of potable water sources for
the villagers in the rural areas of the north
and east of the country, and that an
extensive reforestation program is now in
the planning stages. Alexander U. Toschi
('62) is senior vice president for the National
Foreign Trade Council. Edmund Wesley
DuChemin ('63) is general manager of
Mallinckrodt in Rio de Janeiro. His wife,
Joan, visited campus in November.
CLASS OF '64
Brice Atkinson is a program coordinator,
employment security department, for the
State of Washington. John R. Baker is
director of international marketing and sales
for Soule Steel Co. in Carson, Ca. He
received his M.A. in 1970. J.G. Buchmann,
field landman with the Northwestern
division, exploration and production group
of Phillips Petroleum Co. in Englewood,
Co., visited campus over the holidays.
Michael DeBakey is based in Lima, Peru
and is involved in tourism, aviation, hotels
and mining as an investor-developer. He
has offices in Houston and Miami. Dennis
J. Donahue writes from Ashland, Or.:
"Decided it would be more fun working for
myself than someone else-so retired from
the multinational corporate life and am
enjoying it." Dennis has his own property
development company. Luis M. Garcia is
with Carnation International in Los
Angeles. Robert J. Gehl is president of
Tempotech Industries in Hart, Mi. Judi and
Mitch Summers write from Washington,
D.C., where Mitch is manager of
international affairs for ARMCO, Inc. They
had been in Tehran to open the ARMCO
office and were there for four years, leaving
in December '77. They then went to
Brussels for two years until Mitch received
his assignment in Washington in January
'80. Judi advises that the return to the
States was quite a shock after 15 years
abroad. They are all settled in and Judi has
opened a business of antique French prints
and posters.
CLASS OF '65 and '66
Eric Aguero ('65) is marketing planning
manager, ophthalmics, for Alcon Universal,
Ltd. in Fort Worth. Ben H. Barteldes ('65) is
general manager, Torin Aerotecnica Ltda.,
in Jan Jose Dos Campos, Brazil. The
company is a subsidiary of Torin
Corporation, Torrington, Ct. John de Leon
('65) is international employee relations
manager for FMC Corporation in Chicago.
Edward M. Baltrusaitis ('66) is in Stamford,
Ct. and is export manager, Central and
South America sales for R.T. Vanderbilt
Corporation. Gerald H. Green ('66) is
president and general manager for Foto
Interamericana de Venezuela, S.A. and is
based in Caracas. Christian Larsen, Jr. ('66)
writes from North Carolina: "Finally gave
up commuting to move to Rocky Mount,
N.C. and have purchased a company which
manufactures upholstered furniture for the
mobile home industry. We plan to expand
sales to both retail and export markets. Wife
Eleanor, son Christian and daughter Missie
all well."
18
CLASS OF '67
S. Wayne Bee is in Kohler, Wi. with Kohler
Co. as manager, field sales, international
engine division. Fred L. Bollerer has been
elected an executive vice president of First
City Bancorporation of Texas. He is
responsible for corporate development,
including strategic planning, economics and
technology planning. Bruce S. Derkask is
with PepsiCo., Inc. as director of marketing,
food service international division, the
company's overseas fast food operations.
Evan L. Hand has been promoted to
commercial section manager, supply
division marketing, Owens-Coming
Fiberglas Corp. in Toledo. Donald R.
Milligan is international sales manager with
CooperVision Systems/Cavitron in Irvine,
Ca. J. Mark Paden has been named senior
vice president, director, Latin American
area, international division, of the North
Carolina National Bank in Charlotte. Joel T.
Wineburgh is in New York and is vice
president of Cometals Inc., a trading and
marketing firm.
CLASS OF '68
Victor A. Baltrusaitis is in Sao Paulo and is
manager of Noranda Mines operations.
John Browning, Jr. is a public relations
executive with Chen Sam and Associates in
New York. James F. Corzine writes: "After
eight years with the agricultural chemical
industry, first with FMC Corporation and
later the Monsanto Company, we decided
to establish some 'roots' and in 1977 formed
the Interamerica Marketing Associates
Ltda." Jim's company is located in Bogota
and he sees David Ransome ('72), Peter
Moog ('66) and Bill Messett ('67). Brian
Gauler has accepted an appointment as an
international trade specialist for the State of
Oklahoma. His position is part of the
Governor's staff, but Brian will be located in
Tulsa and "on loan" to the Dallas, Tx.
district director of the U.S. Department of
Commerce. H. Reed Nelson is a property
manager for DW} Model Farms in Jerome,
Id. Rick LeSueur is general manager of the
Hole in the Wall Restaurant and Racquet
Club at the Point Resort in Phoenix.
Michael Pierce writes from Panama, where
he is an attorney: "We have been in
Panama for 11 years now and we are
looking forward to a bright future for this
country. I am on the boards of the
American Chamber of Commerce and the
American Society and am enthusiastic about
Panama's political and economic future."
Ross Quan is an economic officer with the
U.S. State Department. He is studying
Chinese at the Foreign Service Institute
through 1982 and will then go to Taipei,
with eventual assignment as economic
officer at the U.S. Embassy in Beijing,
P.R.C. Charles Smith has joined American
Saw and Manufacturing Co. in East
Longmeadow, Ma.
CLASS OF '69
John P. Barelli is an attorney in Lenexa, Ks.
and handles international business
consulting, investments and general
corporate law. He visited campus in
October and addressed a student group.
Stephen C. Burrell spent most of '81 in
Australia landing a $500 million contract for
John R. Baker '64 Ben Barteldes '65
design and construction of an oil and gas
processing complex for Davy McKee
Corporation. Charles W. Gameros has been
appointed assistant director in the
casualty-property personal lines department
at The Travelers Insurance Companies in
Hartford, Ct. Dennis Giacone, who joined a
bank in San Francisco after graduation and
then spent some time with an international
vegetable oil trading, marketing and
processing company, is now in Phoenix. He
is executive vice president of Valley Seed
Company. The company's research division
is doing business in Spain and Ireland and
hopes to expand to other countries in
Europe and eventually South America.
Donald Ray Hedgpeth is in Alta Loma, Ca.
after spending several years in Saudi Arabia
and the United Arab Emirates. Larry R.
Lamb is in Portland, Or., where he has his
own firm, Lamb Industries, Inc. John
O'Detto is branch manager for First
Interstate Bank of California's San
Bernadino branch. Allen B. Pease is senior
attorney with Williams Brothers Engineering
Company in Tulsa, Ok. John C. Polhemus
is president, Goodyear-Philippines and lives
in Manila. He writes: "After short
assignments in Argentina and Peru,
returned to the Far East in August '81 as
general manager, president. Naturally,
entire family was happy to return to most
interesting and dynamic part of the world."
John William Stanger visited campus from
Lake Forest, n. He is senior representative
for the Toronto-Dominion Bank in Chicago.
He reports that he's seen Fred Broom, area
finance manager, J.1. Case, Racine, Wi. and
Dana Schneider, vice president,
international, First Wisconsin Bank in
Milwaukee. Mark C. Wilson is in Houston
where he is president of his own company,
MCW Investments.
CLASS OF '70
Novatan Alfredo Fernandez-Bussy has been
appointed vice president of Crocker Bank,
San Francisco. Douglas H. Lemmonds is
vice president of Bank of America in
Washington, D.C. John Mcintyre has been
elected a vice president of Cunningham and
Walsh Inc. advertising agency in New York.
Michiaki Mano was transferred in
November by Hitachi, Ltd. to Hong Kong
as finance and administration manager of
their subsidiary, Hitachi Elevator
Engineering. John Muncy is vice president
of Wells Fargo Bank and is regional
manager, Southeast Asia and India. He
moved from Bangkok to Singapore in June
'80. Taking up running for exercise, John
has run two marathons, one in Hong Kong
THE THUNDERBIRD SPRING 1982
Gerald Greene '66 J. Mark Paden '67
James F. Corzine '68 Dennis C. Giacone '69
Charles W. Gameros '69 John C. Polhemus '69
Brian Gauler '69 Peter Wallin 73
John Sandor 73 Ernie Escobedo 73
THE THUNDERBIRD SPRING 1982
and another in Honolulu. Joseph W.
Nichols is vice president, international
department with Johnson & Higgins in New
York. Tom O'Keefe writes that he is
god-father to Susan and Len Holzworth's
son, Reed. Goeran Peters and LeAnne
(Secunda) Peters are in New Orleans, La.
where Goeran is director of Scardex Steel.
Tom Waters is director, sales, Pacific Coast,
Hapag-Lloyd in San Francisco. Charles M.
Weeks is in San Diego and has his own
firm, Weeks & Associates, an international
franchise consultant company.
CLASS OF'71
Robert Charles Hill is general director of
Banco Lar Brusilero in Rio de Janeiro.
Richard K. Phillips is currently regional
manager for Motorola Communication for
Central America and the Caribbean and
lives in Boca Raton, Fl. Franc Rocheieau is
in Golden, Co. with Georgia Boot as
managing representative and territory
manager. He has recently married, and
says, "I couldn't be happier." Marcos L.
Sanchez is with John Deere Co. as area
service manager in Bogota
CLASS OF'72
Leonard J. Black is manager, marketing and
planning, international development
markets for Duracell International, Inc. and
is based in Bethel, Ct. He travels
throughout the Far East, South America,
Mexico and Europe. Gary Buckingham is
general manager, Brazil, for the insurance
firm, Interamericana Companhia de Seguros
in Rio de Janeiro. Tnteramericana is a
member company of AlG, Inc. Gary A.
Burkhardt has been promoted to vice
president of affiliated corporations for
Presbyterian/St. Lukes Medical Center in
Denver. Malcolm H. Byrnes, II has been
appointed as advisory director of
international finance of International
Business Associates Corporation in Austin,
Tx. Ernest Escobedo is marketing manager,
Latin America for Babcock, International,
Inc. in Houston. He writes: " ... have been
back in the U.S. for four years (from
Brazilian two-year assignment). I just
returned to my home state of Texas and
things are looking great career-wise." David
Jaworski recently transferred with Farm and
Home Savings from Kansas City, Mo., to
Dallas, where he is vice president. David E.
Logie has been promoted to director of
international operations at Life Insurance
Marketing and Research Association
(LIMRA) in Hartford, Ct. Gary Miller,
accounts executive and vice president for
National Westminster Bank, Ltd. in
Chicago, has joined the evening faculty at
Elmhurst College in Elmhurst, II. He
teaches international marketing. Howard T.
Mott is vice preSident of Nederlandsche
Middenstandsbank N.V. in New York.
Louis Joseph Pitney is president of
Meridien Trade K.K., an international
marketing and trading company in Tokyo.
B. Michael Powell, Jr. is vice president
with AlG, Inc. in Tokyo, Gary Roberts has
accepted a new position as export manager
with Frederick and Nelson, a major
department store chain in the Pacific
Northwest, and a division of Marshall Field
& Co. He will be responsible for developing
and executing an export program for the
company's brand food products, a new
activity for the store. Charles Rudolf is
managing director of Gentex International,
Tnr in Dalton, Pa. Al Welch resigned from
Republic Steel Corporation and moved to
the Dallas area with his recent bride, Cindy.
They have opened a video and record store,
Welch's Flicks and Tunes, in Rockwall, Tx.
CLASS OF '73
Jerry Allen is senior product manager,
frozen food confections, Knudson
Corporation in Los Angeles. Donald N.
(Nick) Anderson visited campus recently
from Seattle, where he is district manager of
AmerFord International Corporation, an air
and ocean freight forwarding company. R.
Kelley Gibbs visited campus in November
from Corte Madera, Ca., where he is with
Gibbs Brothers ACV (air cushion vehicles).
Beverly Moschel Hirsekorn is a marketing
research specialist for Petroleum
Information Corporation in Denver. Ollie
Jakob has transferred to Continental Plastics
Industries, international operations, as the
senior financial analyst from his post as
international accountant and controller with
Continental Forest Industries, export
division. Ollie is now based in Houston.
Daniel T. Johnston has been appointed
financial services officer for First National
Bank and Trust Co. of Dickinson, ND.
Jeffrey William Koehler is sales manager
for Jack Bradley Realty Co. in Put-in-Bay,
Oh. Mark Mischnick is with the
international department of the Republic
National Bank of Dallas. Jorge Padilla de
Alba is located in Asuncion, Paraguay,
where he is general manager of The First
National Bank of Boston branch. John
Sandor has been named vice director, Asia,
for Philip Morris, Inc. and is located in
Tokyo. Steve Sischka is a partner in Olsen's
Chino Valley Grain Co. in Prescott, Az. He
tells us, ". . . been a partner in an
expanding feed and grain operation with
two stores in northern Arizona and a third
on the way. William M. Tucker, Jr. is sales
manager for Stribling-Puckett, Inc. in
Jackson, Ms. Paul Kelley Wagner is
manager, finance, for Caterpillar in Sao
Paulo. Hal T. Walker is traffic manager for
construction of an Israeli airbase and is
based in Tel Aviv. Peter Wallin has been
residing in Caracas since 1979 and is a
representative of London American Finance
Corporation Ltd. (subsidiary of Midland
Bank, London).
CLASS OF '74
Brad Bradley is a partner in the law firm,
Bradley and Scheulhammer in Dallas.
Patiste G. Bronos writes from Miami: "We
have been (here) for over a year. Previous
assignments with World Courier were in
Greece, Iran, Nigeria, Argentina, Spain and
New York." A. William Charlton is
assistant vice president with Southeast Bank
in Miami. He is in charge of Venezuela,
Panama, Colombia, Ecuador and Peru.
William G. Drewes has been elected a vice
president in the multinational banking
services department of Continental lllinois
National Bank and Trust Co. of Chicago.
Douglas K. Funk is publisher of Made in
Mexico, an international business magazine.
Their second issue of 1981 featured an
exclusive interview with Bernardo Garza
19
Sada, executive director of the Alpha
Industrial Group. Sandra M. Harrison is in
France and is working as a management
supervisor for Grey France. Adolph A.
Hoehling has been general manager for
Citibank in Atlanta since July '80 when he
moved from Ecuador, where he had been
for two years. Lance Keeler, who has been
an assistant vice president with
Manufacturers Hanover Trust Co. in New
York, has transferred to the Frankfurt
branch for a three year assignment. He will
be calling on corporate customers in the
area. Kyung Lee has been promoted to vice
president of Conti-Commodity Services and
was the top ranking producer in Conti in
1981. Marikay Lee-Martinez is an attorney
with the Internal Revenue Service in
Phoenix. Donald J. McLane has been
elected vice president and general manager
of Doboy Packaging Machinery division of
Nordson Corporation. He joined Nordson
Canada, Ltd. in 1975 and served as area
manager and national sales manager. He
also was national sales manager for the
finishing equipment division before being
named general manager for Doboy in 1979.
Gregory John McDonald has been name~
marketing director for the Colgate PalmolIve
subsidiary in Argentina and has moved
from Mexico to Buenos Aires. Paul Nielsen
has been promoted to national accounts
manager for James A. Old & Son Material
Handling Co. in San Carlos, Ca. He is
developing marketing and procurement
functions for all national accounts. Thomas
F. O'Dea has been appointed assistant dean
of instruction at Los Angeles Harbor
College. He is in charge of the evening
outreach division serving more than 6,000
students. Tom, his wife, Marcia, and sons,
Sean and Brian, live in Woodland Hills, Ca.
Preston Pearson is a planner shceduler for
Project Engineering Services, Inc., working
with civil and petrol construction in Saudi
Arabia. Tony Rios has been appointed
export marketing/sales manager for
Champion International Corporation's
building products division in Santurce, P.R.
Mario G. Sabatini is in Woodbury, Ct. with
Timex Corporation. He is corporate
manager, product planning for solid state
products, international. Jay (James) Savage
is Asia regional manager for Plexchem
International, Inc., and is located in the
Philippines. Maribeth Sembach Rahe is vice
president, Scandinavian district, Morgan
Guaranty Bank in London. T.S. Sinha left
Texas Instruments and joined RDA
International as international marketing
manager. He is in Houston. James R.
Tencher, Jr. is a deputy representative for
Manufacturers Hanover Trust Co. in
Caracas. Arnt Vagle is now back in Noway
running his own import/export company
engaged in the video trade. William L.
Valenti is vice president and treasurer of
McDermott International Marketing Co. in
New Orleans. Andres Voto-Bernales writes
from Lima, where he has been since 1980
doing marketing for Unilever products. He
worked for E.R. Squibb & Sons from '75 to
'79 in Venezuela, Ecuador and Colombia.
20
CLASS OF '75
Raymond H. Aka has been promoted to
supervisor of a new section, financial .
administration and taxes, of Garrett Turbme
Engine Co. in Phoenix. Richard Bram, sales
representative for Blue Bell, Inc. , apparel
manufacturers in Louisville, Ky., visited
campus in mid-December. David W.
Bridewell is working for Hibernia National
Bank of New Orleans as a real estate
lending officer. Ian Campbell writes from
New York: "After five years with Shell, I
have joined Philipp Brothers (division of
Phibro Corp.) as an international oil trader.
My area is Central-South America and the
Caribbean." Alex Cohen is general manager
of the commercial collection division of Dun
& Bradstreet in The Netherlands. Vladimir
Egger is a trader with Marc Rich & Co. in
New York. Tom and Terry (Byrnes)
Fadrhonc are living in Larchmont, N.Y.
Both are account supervisors; Tom with
Needham, Harper & Steers in New York,
and Terry, with North Castle Partners in
Greenwich, Ct. They have a son, Adrian,
age 2. They see Cynthia (Leidner) Muller as
well as Willem Mock ('74) with Cargill in
Omaha, and Tom Trefts ('74) with
Carnation in Los Angeles. John A. FIasco
has been promoted to vice president/senior
credit and marketing officer for Bank of
America's main branch in Buenos Aires.
Giovanni Gangone is assistant general
manager of SCM International in Rimini,
Italy. Rod Granger, assistant branch
manager of U.S. National Bank of Oregon
in Portland, visited campus in late
December. Simon Hakim writes from Israel
that while on a business trip to Europe and
Africa, he met with Bob English ('76). In
Lagos, Nigeria, he saw Kinsley I. Ikpe ('73)
who works for Icon, Ltd. (Merchants Bank)
and has been promoted to senior manager.
He also heard from Satjiv S. Chalil, who
plans on visiting the Middle East in the
near future. Ghassan Majdalani is regional
manager for North/Central Africa and the
Middle East for the Speed Queen Co., a
Raytheon Company. Kevin O'Donnell is
director, international marketing for HPI
and is in Los Angeles. Robert J. Rosser is
assistant vice president of Hudson (Skandia)
Reinsurance Company in Hamilton,
Bermuda. Deborah Ann Smith is director of
public relations and special projects for The
Golden Door in San Diego and her sister
spa, Rancho la Puerta in Baja, Mexico. Will
F. Smith, from Houston, visited campus in
October. He is vice preisdent of Cheyenne
Services, Inc., an oil field service company.
David B. Terrar recently left Bechtel
Corporation and accepted a position as
international compensation manager for the
international nuclear division of
Westinghouse. He is located in Pittsburgh.
Carol Thoele has been named the
international executive director of
Dzierzynski & Associates in Chicago. J.
Jorge Verduzco is vice president,
international department of the
International Bank of Commerce in Laredo,
Tx. Dirk Bruno Visser has moved to Rio de
Janeiro where he is with Drexel Burnham
Lambert do Brasil, Ltda.
CLASS OF '76
Walter T. "Walt" Atkinson has been named
sales manager of Cessna Aircraft
Company's project marketing division. He
will be responsible for directing sales
programs for Cessna's propjets in the U.S.
and Canada and lives in Wichita, Ks. David
A. Barnett, III is an account executive with
the investment firm of Underwood,
Neuhaus & Co. in Houston. Linda Jean
(Haggerty) Barnett is in Houston and is
manager of budgets for Elf Aquitaine Oil &
Gas, a French company which recently
acquired Texasgulf. Bruno Cornelio has
relocated to Brunei, where he is manager of
Bank of America's branch office. Samuel
Cotterell is a C.P.A. with Arthur Andersen
& Co. in Boise, Id. Jaime Drutchas has
joined Ross Roy, Inc., an advertising agency
in Detroit. She is account supervisor on the
Upjohn account. Joe Fullop is manager,
international revenue/finance for Prime
Computer, Inc. in Natick, Ma. Garry Brent
Gammon is in San Francisco and was
promoted to general counsel for Cromemco.
Thomas Grady is with Ford Motor
Company as field manager in Teterboro, NJ.
Kirk Haws, who until recently was district
manager for Clark Equipment Co. in
Singapore, visited campus in November. He
was named regional manager for
AfricalMid-East for Clark and will be
moving to Athens, Greece soon. William
(Bill) Johnson visited the office in late
October. He is with Bucyrus Erie and lives
in Fogelsville, Pa. Peter J. Jucht is manager
for planning and business development for
American Hospital Supply Corporation in
Saint Oven L' Aumone, France. Ken
Krasney has been transferred to the Paris
office of Bankers Trust. Kohei Ogawa is in
New York and is export manager of Hai Hai
of Massachusetts, Inc. He writes: "I arrived
in New York in November '81 in my
present job. I spent almost two years
traveling the U.S. to start up the company
(a Kikkoman U.S. subsidiary). I have
brought my family to New York and will be
working here several years to expand the
export business to overseas from the U.S."
Brian D. O'Neill is second vice president
with Chase Manhattan Bank in Santiago.
Michael A. Perlino has been elected
assistant vice president of Harris Bank in
Chicago. Jeffrey L. Schneider is a product
specialist with Lanier Gmbh, near
Frankfurt. Michael W. Short is an assistant
vice president with Citibank in Nagoya,
Japan. Jerry Sullivan and Bobbie N~lson
have joined forces and formed the firm,
International Marketing Consulting in
Honolulu. Thomas (Tom) Thompson is
with Peat Marwick, Mitchell as a senior
consultant in Costa Mesa, Ca.
CLASS OF '77
Janice and Abdelkader Bachesais are in
England where Kader is area general
manager for International Standard Brands
(recently merged with Nabisco). They
moved to London in June after two years
with ISB in Athens, Greece. Robert S.
Childs visited campus from Houston: "Just
started with Gulf Oil in September '81, after
nearly two years with First City National
Bank of Houston. The balloon race was
great-but missed the Texas Club chili
cook-off." Michael D. Christenson has
THE THUNDERBIRD SPRING 1982
Paul Nielsen '74 Lance Keeler '74
Donald j. McLane '74 Bruno Comella '76
Jamie Drutchas '76 Michael Per/ina '76
James Emslie '77 Barbara B. Kamm '77
Steve Gandy '78 Steve Zurcher '78
THE THUNDERBIRD SPRING 1982
committed to a term of extended service
with the Evangelical Lutheran Church of
Kenya. After four to five months of
language training in Swahili in Nairobi, he
will move to Kisii, where he will work as an
administrator for the church. Thomas Cole
is with American Express in Sunrise, Fl.
Patrick Consorti is director of PSA
Finanziaria Italia in Milan. Nawaf El-Assad
is area marketing manager, West Africa for
Brown & Williamson Tobacco Co. and is
located in Athens, Greece. James A. Emslie
has been promoted to vice president in the
energy division of the corporate banking
group of Security Pacific National Bank in
Los Angeles. Susan D. Arnold Guidry
writes: " ... just returned from a trip to
Paris, Algiers and Casablanca." She is
region finance manager for Paccar
International, Inc. in Bellevue, Wa. William
A. Head is presidentlbroker with Highlands
Investment Group in Evergreen, Co. Tim
Hoffman is in Houston and is marketing
manager for U.S.! International. Debra
Huffman left EDS World Corporation in
October after four years of working as a
systems engineer in Iran, The Netherlands
and Mexico. She has returned to the U.S. to
obtain a masters degree in MIS and will be
associated with Blue Cross of Northwest
Ohio in Grand Rapids, Ohio, as a senior
programmer/analyst while completing her
degree at Bowling Green State University.
Barbara B. Kamm has been promoted to
vice president at Marine National Bank in
Santa Ana, Ca. Dennis Keithly, from
Torrance, Ca., visited campus for the
Balloon Race and tells us he is the assistant
export manager for Overseas Operations,
Inc. in Redondo Beach, Ca. Teresa King
(Silbert) visited campus over the Christmas
holidays and was accompanied by her
husband, Michael, and five-month-old
daughter, Susan. Teresa is an associate
consultant with Touche Ross & Co. in
Chicago. Jonathan E. Kranz is in New York
and is the assistant chef for Michael
Phillips. Lynn M. Kuchinski is a data base
analyst for Costal Corporation in Houston.
Charlie Lowe, who is export manager for
Overseas Operations, Inc., in Redondo
Beach, Ca., attended the Balloon Race and
visited the alumni office. Ben Miedema was
elected chairman of the Houston World
Trade Association, Young Executive Group.
Jeffrey A. Nigh has been promoted to an
international auditor with Bank of America's
Latin American/Caribbean audit division.
He will be located in Caracas. Yoshi
Noguchi visited campus recently from
Colorado, where he is marketing programs
manager, Americas/Asia operations for
Storage Technology Corporation in
Louisville. George Norton has joined Ethyl
Corporation in Baton Rouge, La. as a
salesman in their industrial and speciality
chemicals, Latin America section. Gail C.
Quinn passed the Pennsylvania c.P.A.
exam in November 'SO. She would like to
hear from other T-Birds in the Pittsburgh
area. Elizabeth Haley Roberts is a financial
analyst with the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, Washington, D.C.
Thomas J. Ryan III is branch manager for
Hershey Creamery Co. in Batavia, N.Y. He
oversees all of western New York, including
Rochester and Buffalo. James P. Scott, Jr. is
employed by Structural Dynamics Research
Corporation as marketing manager. Mark
Steinborn is regional sales manager for
Volvo of America Corporation and is based
in Hayward, Ca. Karen Stromberg is an
acquisition analyst with Ensearch, Inc. m
Dallas.
CLASS OF '78
Daniel M. Behnisch is operations manager,
U.S. operations office, Dun and Bradstreet,
International, Inc. in New York. Randall A.
Bera, along with partner James T. Edwards
has formed a firm, Hospitality Partner, Inc.
in Newport Beach, Ca. The company offers
hotel, resort and timeshare services as well
as consulting services in real estate and
financing. David L. Brothers is in the
Austin, Tx. area and is a real estate broker
and president of his own company, 06, Inc.
Karl E. Edelmann is owner/operator of
Noble Food Service in Horseheads, N.Y.
Troy Douglas Emde is in Chicago and is air
export supervisor for Max Gruenhut
International, Inc. Karl Erdman has been
promoted to manager, planning and
analysis, international consumer division of
Schering Plough in Memphis. Jeffrey Mark
Ferm is general manager for Bredero Price
Saudi Arabia Ltd. and is located in Jubail.
He is also a member of the board of
directors of the company, the largest
pipecoating company in the world. Steve
Gandy has joined Provident National Bank
in Philadelphia as assistant vice president.
He will be working in the Latin America
division. John P. Klecker is a project
accountant with Airesearch Industrial, a
division of Garrett Corporation. Tom Kraft,
who is assistant area manager for
International Harvester Export Co. in
Singapore, visited campus for the Balloon
Race. Greig S. Locker has been transferred
by Holland Chemicals International to their
Hamilton, Bermuda office, where he is
commercial manager of HCI Chemicals
(Bermuda) Ltd. Timothy C. Lund is
expeditor in the international department of
National Supply Co. in Houston. George B.
McReddie has been named banking officer
in the international banking service
department of Continental Illinois National
Bank of Chicago. Steven M. Reinbolt has
been promoted to territorial consultant in
the Southern Pacific resource center of ISU
Companies, Inc. He will provide liaison,
management and insurance consultation to
ISU independents in Orange County and
parts of Los Angeles County. Lewis W.
Ross, Jr. is an instructor-special systems, for
Cubic Corporation in San Diego. Joseph C.
Schmieder is manager, international
operations, for Oliver Products Co., a
packaging equipment manufacturer in
Grand Rapids, Mi. He writes: "Job involves
travel throughout the world, where I've met
many helpful 'Thunderbirds.' " Diane
Sherman is in Singapore with Warner
Brothers (F.E.), Inc. She writes that when in
Chile she ran into Brian D. O'Neill ('76),
second vice president with Chase
Manhattan Bank. Jan O. Skybak was
promoted as of October 1 to head up
investment and production control in
Gerresheimer Glas A.G., a subsidiary of
Owens-Illinois Inc., in Dusseldorf. Jan
sends us news that Peter Edelmann joined
Owens-Illinois in June on the
internationalist program. Eric Sletten is vice
21
president, international, of C & c. Co., an
international trading company in Scottsdale,
Az. Will Spurgeon is working for Lawrys
Foods International, Inc. as director of
marketing and sales in Maynooth, Ireland.
David Steffen is in Australia with Goodyear
International Corporation. W. Bruce Walters
has been promoted to assistant manager of
administrative document control with a
Morrison-Knudsen Company subsidiary
based in Burlingame, Ca. The company's
current project is constructing a coal mine, a
port facility and a connecting railroad line in
Colombia. Robert Whelan has been
promoted to product director at Richardson
Vicks, Inc. in Wilton, Ct. David John
Wilson has joined Pittsburgh National
Bank's international banking division as
international banking officer. Steven D.
Zurcher has been named manager of
tax-free marketing for R.J. Reynolds
Tobacco International, Inc. He will relocate
to Miami.
CLASS OF '79
Craig Adams has opened his own
import-export trading company based in
San Francisco and Grenoble, France.
Melody A. Ball is in Dallas and is product
manager for five semiconductor lines for
Hall-Mark Electronics. L.L (Shashi)
Bembalker .has joined Fluor Ocean Services
as senior construction engineer. He and his
wife, Tej, who is in manager training at
City National Bank, reside in Houston.
Kenneth A. Bonne is product manager for
Lear Siegler, Inc.lAvitron international
division in Singapore. Steve W. Brown
resigned from his position in the national
accounts division of Foreign Credit
Insurance Association in New York in
October and joined Northern Trust Co. of
Chicago's international department in their
New York Edge Act office. John C. Cook
joined Merrill Lynch International and
moved to New York from Paris in October
to obtain his securities license and company
orientation. Then its back to Brussels.
Michael Dreyer is employed by Bechtel
Petroleum as a contract/purchases agent on
the Saudi Arabian Yanbu project and he
lives in Houston. Conrad Eilts is an
assistant vice president of Chase Manhattan
Bank and is stationed in Manama, Bahrain.
He was previously with Citibank. Jeff
Fadley is in Tulsa, Ok. with Hilti-U.S.A. as
a financial analyst. Brian Farmer has been
working as assistant to the director of
finance at the new King Abdulaziz
International Airport in Saudi Arabia since
February '81. He writes, " . .. in July I
teamed up once again with my roommate
from the summer of '79. He returned to
Jeddah after six months of commodities
training in the States. The climate and
terrain here remind me a lot of Phoenix,
except it is more humid here, since we're
on the Red Sea. I've taken up scuba diving
since the coral reefs, which are just
offshore, are some of the most outstanding
in the world." Vadim Fischer was on
campus recently recruiting for Continental
Grain. He is based in St. Louis, Mo. with
the company. Robert G. Genis is president
of National Gemstone Corporation in
Phoenix. Richard J. Gibson is in Boulder,
Co. with Keith Stevens, Inc., a management
consulting firm. Andrew Scott Gleeman is
22
assistant to the preisdent at Whitehall
International, Inc. in New York. Brent W.
Godfrey visited campus in October from
New York, where he is manager,
employment and training for the Royal
Bank of Canada. Yves Gourmelen has been
transferred to the Bunker Ramo
headquarters in Oakbrook, II. and assigned
to the international division as a senior
financial analyst. Roger H. Guichard, Jr. is
with Arthur D. Little as a consultant. James
W. Hayes is manager, international trade
for Universeas Corporation in Cleveland.
Universeas is a joint venture with China
National Machinery ImportfExport Corp.,
one of the major foreign trade corporations
in the People's Republic of China. Jim adds,
"It was incorporated in September '80 with
the purpose of developing two-way trade
with the P.R.C. The company represents
U.S. companies attempting to penetrate the
China market. It also buys and sells
products on its own account and is active in
finding markets for China-made products as
well as securing buyers in China for
U.S.-made products." Darcy Hofmann was
recently sworn in as an officer in the U.S.
Foreign Service. She is scheduled to serve
in Seoul. Tom Hofmanner is assistant to an
account director at D' Arcy, Macmanus &
Masius in Zurich. He says he is happy and
life is treating him well. Yun-Jung Huang is
an account executive with Executive
Resources in San Francisco. Murat lIter,
who worked for two years in Los Angeles
for V.S.!. Corporation, is returning to
Turkey. He will be spending four months in
the military there and will resume his
business career following his military
service. Vince Jensen is marketing
representative for Latin America for Epson
America and he is based in Torrance, Ca.
Rosalie L. Johnson is a senior analyst, new
venture department, for Seagram Overseas
Sales Co. in New York. Simon R. Kings,
who is a salesman with Remco Stationers in
Santa Ana, Ca., was in Phoenix in late
September and early October
honeymooning at the Scottsdale Hilton with
his bride, Lisa-Marie Gamboa. They were
married September 26. Henry Longmire is
in AI-Khobar, Saudi Arabia, with Chase
Manhattan Bank. Sydney C. Okoye is
president of his own company, Neufeld
Dynamics, Inc. in St. Louis, Mo. The
company is an export trading company and
represents many American manufacturing
firms. They export mainly to major African
markets. Sydney says: "Our main goal is
setting up a distribution system to supply
these major African markets with all the
American products they need at competitive
prices." Edward J. Pomeroy is with
Heath/Zenith International in St. Joseph,
Mi. He is regional export manager. John
Pressler is currently marketing coordinator
for Hapag-Lloyd AG Transpacific Service
and is based in San Francisco. Emily J.
Rayes is with First National Bank of
Chicago as a trade finance representative.
Susan Rybar, with Bechtel Power
Corporation in Norwalk, Ca., visited
campus for the Balloon Race. Nancy P.
Schwartz is an underwriter with AlG in San
Francisco. She says Dick Frederickson ('69)
is a vice president at AIG. John S. Sieh has
written for the first time since he graduated
to say he's been travelling throughout the
world (30 countries). He has accepted a
position as international productions control
advisor with Cal-China (H.K.) Ltd. He
adds, " ... currently living in San Francisco
area while on a training program and
intensive language course in Chinese. In
January I shall be moving to Guangzhou,
P.R.c., where I will be one of the first
foreign businessmen to have a permanent
base in that country. In other words, I have
a T-Bird's dream job." Charles Signer is
sales administrator for Paccar International,
Inc. in Bellevue, Wa. and will be moving to
the company's Bahrain district office soon.
Peter Spielmann is controller of the lighting
division of GTE Sylvania C.A. in Caracas.
Barbara Anne Stone has been transferred
from Massachusetts to San Francisco with
Management Decision Systems, Inc. She
will act as a consultant in marketing,
representing the market response division
of MDS in the San Francisco area. Gail
Susik has been promoted to manager,
training and rrocedures for agriculture retail
enterprises 0 the J.1. Case Co. She will be
based in Racine, Wi., but will be travelling
frequently to the company's 180 retail
stores. Debra A. Thomas is a finance
representative for Latin America with Solar
Turbines, Inc. Gayle Thomas came over
from San Diego, where he is with Conti
Commodity, to attend the Balloon Race. W.
Cliff Topping is executive director of the
Tampa Bay (Fl.) International Trade
Council, according to Robert Bean ('48).
Gianni Torti, account executive, Johnson &
Higgins ItaIia, writes from Milan that, " .. .
there are dozens of T-Birds in Milan-we
are everywhere!" Theo VanderLoo is
product manager for Schering S.A. in Rio
de Janeiro. Mark von Brockdorff has joined
Korf Trading, Inc. as a ferro-alloy trader. He
and spouse, Judy, are living in Stamford,
Ct. Alexander von Gimbut is general
manager of Diversified Products
International/Amerasia Trading Company in
San Francisco. Thomas Whiting, Jr. has
been promoted to senior sales, Latin
American division of Hydril Co. in
Houston. Patricia D. Wilson writes from
Denver, where she is a marketing
representative for UPG, Inc. " .. . the oil
and gas industry is an exciting business
with many opportunities."
CLASS OF '80
Victor T. Alexander is in Jeddah, Saudi
Arabia, and is associated with Abbar &
Zainy. Debasish Banerjee is an applications
consultant with Capex Corporation in
Phoenix. Chris Becker is in New York with
Chase Manhattan's Trade Banking Group.
Edward Benizzi is with John Deere
Intercontinental, Ltd. as area manager,
product support. He visited campus
recently and will be moving to Guadalajara.
Judy (Anderson) Brown is with
Hewlett-Packard in Phoenix as a staff
engineer. Darcie Buck is in New York with
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner and Smith.
Leslie Call has left her position with SSC&B
in New York and is now located in San
Francisco with Foote, Cone &
BeldingIHonig Advertising. David D.
Chapman, marketing representative,
international industrial division, Purex
Industries, Inc., visited campus in
December from Carson, Ca. Susan Coady is
merchandise sales manager for Texscan in
THE THUNDERBIRD SPRING 1982
Barbara A. Stone '79 Kent Erickson '80
Jim Reinnoldt '81
Phoenix. Catherine P. deLong is a cost
accountant with Sperry Flight Systems in
Albuquerque, N.M. Mary Doan is a
financial analyst with Litton Industries in
Beverly Hills, Ca. Deborah C. Doyle is in
New York and is a financial analyst with
W.R. Grace & Co. Kent V. Erickson has
been named a vice president of the Grand
Hotel in Mackinac Island, Michigan. Linda
Frank is in Decatur, AI. with Disposables,
Inc. as a production coordinator. Robert
Hackett is living in Welwyn Garden City,
Hertfordshire, U.K., where he is marketing
manager, Central Africa, for SmithKIine &
French, Ltd. Dieter Hees is a marketing
representative for John Deere
Intercontinental Ltd. S.A. in Brussels.
Barbara Hochfield is in New York and is a
commodities trainee with Marc Rich & Co.
Tom Jordan visited campus and tells us he
is area manager for John Deere
Intercontinental, Ltd. He is currently living
in San Antonio and working in northern
Mexico while awaiting his residency visa to
move to Mexico. Ki Sun Jung is with the
Institute of Hospital Services in Seoul.
Ginny Krivas is a marketing coordinator
and executive assistant to the vice president
and president of Lindsay International Sales
Corporation in Houston. Javid Ladan writes
from Toronto: " ... I have decided to go
into business for myself and will be opening
it with an art show of my recent works."
Javid has her own Gallery Cafe in Toronto,
Chez Capucine. Charlie LaFond is director
of the Berlitz School in Vienna. He says the
languages taught there are English, French
and German and that they will be adding
Spanish, Italian and possibly Arabic in the
early part of 1982. Kent E. Lupberger is a
credit analyst with Chase Manhattan Bank
in New York. Jim McHatton is in Fort
Worth working for Career Marketing, Inc.
as an account executive. Brian A. Murphy
has been transferred to Santiago by AFIA.
Giovanni Pollastri has resigned from
Olivetti and joined Irving Trust Company in
THE THUNDERBIRD SPRING 1982
Milan. Eric Port has joined Capex
Corporation in Phoenix as an applications
consultant. Randy Riddell has accepted a
position as purchasing and inventory
administrator for Stuart Radiator Co. in
Gardena, Ca. Susan (Keller> Ryan is an
international credit administrator for
Datagraphix, Inc., a subsidiary of General
Dynamics. Husband Paul, is a finance
representative for Solar Turbines, Inc. a
subsidiary of Caterpillar. They live in San
Diego. Richard (Dick) Slade is a marketing
representative for IBM in Phoenix. Vickie
(Benedict) Slade is a loan officer with the
international department of the United Bank
of Arizona in Phoenix. David Mills Smelser
is a credit analyst with Southeast First
National Bank of Miami. Dianne "DeDe"
Springer is in Houston, where she is doing
some consulting for the Chamber of
Commerce and her husband, Bob, is with
the Fluor Corporation. Peter Steffen is
working for the Royal Bank of Canada,
International in their Miami office and is
expecting a foreign assignment sometime in
1982. Lindsey Stewart is an international
banking officer with First Interstate Bank of
California in Los Angeles. Anita Sur
Claricoates has accepted an assignment in
Sao Paulo with First National Bank of
Chicago. She is an international account
representative with the bank and will spend
three months in First Chicago'S office in Sao
Paulo, followed by two months in a
Brazilian bank which acts as a foreign
correspondent bank for First Chicago.
Philip Treu is assistant controller at
Marriott's Camelback Inn in Scottsdale.
Mark Unglaub resigned from United States
Lines and joined Transpacific
Transportation Company as a sales
representative in San Francisco. He adds
that Andy Kleiman ('75) was helpful in his
job search and the the T-Bird mystique really
came through for me." Willem G. Van de
Fliert is with Citibank as an account officer
in Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
CLASS OF '81
Steve Adler is territorial manager for
southern California for Elizabeth Arden,
and he lives in Seal Beach, Ca. Claudia R.
Alarcon is president of New Universal
Trading and New Universal Engineering
Co. in Cebu City, Philippines. Derene Rae
Allen is a marketing analyst with American
Express Co., Latin American consumer
financial services division, in Coral Gables,
Fl. John D. Allen has joined Dresser
Industries and is training in Ohio and will
eventually work in Houston. Abbey Alpern
is a market research analyst with Frederick
Electronics Corporation in Frederick, Md.
Karen L. Berman is director of development
for the Arthritis Foundation, Allied
Agencies Center, in Peoria, n. Mario Carra
is located in Danvers, Ma. and is working
for GTE Sylvania. Craig W. Christianson is
new business development coordinator with
the international steel division of Midwest
Corporation, Miami. Richard G. DeNatale
is an assistant account executive with Doyle
Dane Bernbach Advertising, Ltd., New
York. He writes that he's working on the
Stroh Brewery account and that he's up to
his ears in the stuff. He adds, "Its great!"
Olga Eldek has been transferred by the Eli
Lilly Company from Rome to Geneva. Saleh
A. EI-Ramahi has joined Saudi American
Bank in Alkhobar, Saudi Arabia. Catherine
Gordon is a grain merchandiser with
Continental Grain Co. in Memphis. R.
Charlton Griffin is an account executive
with The Glama Agency